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In what could probably be described as a fit of weakness, I bought the 18052 Pennsy 238E Torpedo, in a local TCA auction. I just couldn't pass it up since I've always have been a fan. I plan to run it in conventional as I note that it is TMCC but I have access to a TMCC-controlled layout. Is there anything I need to know (I've already heard one-exploded zinc pest tender story) about this engine (quirks, issues, etc) before I break the seal on the box?

 

Peter

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It's a beautiful little model, and while I do not have one a friend does and it is a levely runner, and just very pretty. 

 

I'' go ahead and emphasize the obvious with a recent lesson I got: several months ago got a Lionel loco nearly as old and NIB - from 2000.  Before running it I checked it.  The grease/oil/lube whatever it was originally had hardened to a really thick, near-solid goo.  I cleaned it out as best I could , using thin Lionel oil to loosen it where particularly hard - all of which required a bit of work -- and relubed it per the instructions, and it runs perfectly now.  Not every old loco I have bought was tha tway, but . . . 15 years in the box - and it only takes a minute to check. 

I bought this engine when in came out back in '96.  Its been a very dependable engine.  The engine came with an extra set of driver wheels.  The ones installed on the engine are magnetraction.  The extra wheels have tire traction.  You can swap out the wheels depending on the track you use.

 

The smoke unit had an issue that it would tend to spit smoke fluid up the stack.  I believe a fix was posted on this board years ago.  It was a simple mod but I don't remember what it was.  Something about drilling an extra air hole or something.

 

The engine uses an LCRU board.  I had to adjust mine once as it no longer was detecting the command signal.  There is a pot on the board that I needed to adjust to get it to detect the signal again.  I moved the adjustment maybe a 1/8 rotation and all has been well ever since.

Pete, I've had one since they first came out.  Upon opening the first thing you'll notice is an apology from Gary M.  Stateside Lionel couldn't get the stripes right on the steamchest/boiler front, so they left them off.

 

It's Pulmore powered.  If under TMCC you'll have to set the Stall or you'll be cranking the red dial a bit.

 

The above mentioned steamchest is wide, probably the widest of any Lionel engine.  I had to make some track/accessory adjustments.

 

It's tethered (before IR).

 

Great whistle; early Railsounds.

 

Heavy, and alot of old Lionel nostalga.

Some more background on this neat engine:

 

* The tooling is original to that made by La Precisa in the mid 1930's.

* Unlike the original spur-geared 4-4-2 drive-train, this one uses the B6 chassis from 1989 to create a 4-6-2.

* Like its B6 cousin, this engine shares a "spitty" smoke unit with other mechanical smoke unit engines of the era including the 1-700E.  The cure for this was covered in an article by Jim Barrett many moons ago, and it is a simple one:

 

Remove the screws on the top of the unit.  Remove the top, and you will find that the element is installed vertically alongside a die-cast baffle.  DRILL a 1/4" hole through the baffle adjacent to the middle of the element resistor.  Reassemble. 

 

You will now have airflow across and through the unit, giving you nice white puffs (1 per revolution) as she rolls down the tracks.

 

Jon 

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OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Suite 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
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