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One of my pet peeves is coupler operation. It really frustrates me to have to slam an engine into its cars to get it to couple. I just picked up a Lionel Legacy 0-8-0 and it does not like to couple very well at slow speeds. I lubed it up with a light oil on the pin and anywhere I thought there might be friction, but it didn't really solve the problem. Does anyone have any tips or tricks to get them to operate better? I really want to do some switching operations on the layout with the new switcher, but I can't until this issue is sorted. Thanks.

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The mechanism inside the back part of the coupler shank is what hangs up. The  dry graphite lube is what is recommended back in there. My couplers have all gotten better over time, I've also found some that just don't get pushed far enough in to close, I think sometimes the rolling stock couplers are at fault for this. For these I put a small piece of electrical tape on the outside of the knuckle which allows the coupler to reach the fully closed and locked position when pushed against the other coupler.Obviously, longer trains create more resistance and help too, as one car wants to just roll away.

Originally Posted by jonnyspeed:
One of my pet peeves is coupler operation. It really frustrates me to have to slam an engine into its cars to get it to couple. I just picked up a Lionel Legacy 0-8-0 and it does not like to couple very well at slow speeds. I lubed it up with a light oil on the pin and anywhere I thought there might be friction, but it didn't really solve the problem. Does anyone have any tips or tricks to get them to operate better? I really want to do some switching operations on the layout with the new switcher, but I can't until this issue is sorted. Thanks.

Here is how I addressed the issue. 







Regards,
GNNPNUT

Don't tempt me GNNPNUT!

 

Kadees are awesome. In any scale they just glide together. On my HO layout even a single car will couple on at the slowest of speeds. I'm not really sure what the practical value is of having electrocouplers. I find that I need to couple/uncouple at the same spots on the layout all the time. I can do that with fixed magnets. I don't see a whole lot of value in the ability to open them anywhere. Now maybe if they actually worked at a reasonable speed I might feel better about them? Ironically, the more freely rolling the rolling stock, the harder I have to hit it to couple. I guess too free rolling is a bad thing?!?!

Maybe knuckles made of earth metals that are magnetized may work. However uncoupling them would require a helper engine on the other end.

 

I cheat by parking a road engine at one end and feeding it or using a end of track bumper combined with a slight downgrade to get the onery troublesome cars to let go.

 

Graphite is a very good solution. Not perfect but better.


Kaydees are the ultimate. I have some rolling stock that has kadees which actually hold on to the knuckles really well.

Originally Posted by Jeff Metz:

If one had lightly oiled the coupler and had minor success would it be necessary to clean all the oil off before adding graphite? My gut says yes but I'm hoping someone's answer that knows of these things is no. 

 

Jeff 

Yes, you have to clean it before using the graphite.  I'm not sure how it would work mixed with oil, my sense is not that good.

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