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I recently picked up this nice looking Weaver 2-8-0 engine. It runs smoothly, but has a very annoying high pitched whine as well as a grinding sound that I tried to capture in the video. Is this a normal sound for these engines ? I took the shell off and found several loose screws (not including mine LOL ) and tightened them. Nothing looked like it was rubbing. It has the normal looking DC motor connected to the gear with a plastic piece connecting the 2 parts. The whine is the most annoying. You can hear it above the sound of 12 scale freight cars running on the tracks. The grinding I'm not too fond of, but I bought a new MTH UP Golden Spike 4-4-0 a while back and it runs great, but has a similar grinding sound. Both engines have a louder sound going forward and slightly quieter sound going in reverse. Anyway, I bought the Weaver based on a couple of great reviews from people on here. Just want to know if something is wrong or this is how they sound. Thanks. - Scott

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You’ll have to pop off the boiler shell to investigate, sounds motor/ gear train related. Look to see if something is scrubbing the flywheel, see if the motor mount screws are loose, and motor TO mount screws are loose,….check the condition of the grease, or lack there of in the gear box. ……is this a new to you noise?…or has it been that way from the get-go?.

Pat

@harmonyards posted:

You’ll have to pop off the boiler shell to investigate, sounds motor/ gear train related. Look to see if something is scrubbing the flywheel, see if the motor mount screws are loose, and motor TO mount screws are loose,….check the condition of the grease, or lack there of in the gear box. ……is this a new to you noise?…or has it been that way from the get-go?.

Pat

I'll go take it apart again. I did find the 2 motor mount screws were loose and tightened them. The gear box seemed to be full of bearing grease (as prescribed in Weaver's paperwork). The noise came with the engine which I just received last week, so not sure if that's why it was sold or not. Bought it on Trainz.com. Thanks for the help.

Scott

I have one and its quieter than that in forward and makes some noise in reverse.

Has it been run much ? it may need breaking in . It sounds like gear train and motor noise.

They did use a cheap motor in them and they make a fair amount of noise.

Be sure gearbox isnt touching against frame.

The brass boiler shell doesn't absorb sound like diecast locos .

I have put blue painters tape on inside of boiler shell to deaden sounds of gear train.

It is a nice loco and worth a little tinkering to quiet it down.

Here are a few pics of it after the shell is removed. I'll have to do more investigating tomorrow. The instructions said it requires "bearing grease" on the gear. Is that standard automotive bearing grease ? Everything else I've ever owned I've used Labelle 106 lithium grease. Thanks for all the suggestions.

Scott20230124_17571820230124_19015720230124_19084020230124_190903

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Try greasing the gear box, and oiling the ends of the motor shaft. If that doesn’t make any difference, the noise is more than likely coming from that giant Mabuchi motor. Most Weaver & Williams brass locomotives are geared to the moon, and thus the motors scream just to crawl,……some of those engines just simply sound like they’re gonna blow themselves to bits, ……

Pat

I have several of these Weaver H10s 2-8-0's and they are all silent runners.  I never have heard one scream like yours does.  They have a 16:1 gearbox so are not "geared to the moon."  The high gear ratio Pennsy brass models are the Williams K4's, which have 40:1 gearboxes and the Weaver T1 4-4-4-4 with a whopping 72:1 gearbox.  That one does have some motor whine, as would be expected.

This model does not have Engineer on Board, as the photos show no sensor or stripes on the flywheel.  I suspect the motor itself could be making that racket.  You could loosen the motor mount screws, loosen the small Allen screw that secures the flywheel, slide the flywheel off the shaft (this takes pressure from 2 screwdrivers to pry it forward) and test the motor by itself.

@Bob posted:

I have several of these Weaver H10s 2-8-0's and they are all silent runners.  I never have heard one scream like yours does.  They have a 16:1 gearbox so are not "geared to the moon."  The high gear ratio Pennsy brass models are the Williams K4's, which have 40:1 gearboxes and the Weaver T1 4-4-4-4 with a whopping 72:1 gearbox.  That one does have some motor whine, as would be expected.

This model does not have Engineer on Board, as the photos show no sensor or stripes on the flywheel.  I suspect the motor itself could be making that racket.  You could loosen the motor mount screws, loosen the small Allen screw that secures the flywheel, slide the flywheel off the shaft (this takes pressure from 2 screwdrivers to pry it forward) and test the motor by itself.

The worm wheel in the pics of that locomotive has very fine teeth. If it were 16:1 those teeth would be far fewer, and further apart,….I’m not seeing 16:1 with that worm wheel…….

Pat

I measured several of the Weaver and Williams brass that came through here, and some did have up to 44:1 gear ratios.  With the motor screaming at 8,000 RPM, they were doing around 38 scale MPH.  I never saw one with 72:1 gear ratio, that wouldn't have much of a top end I suspect!

@harmonyards posted:

The worm wheel in the pics of that locomotive has very fine teeth. If it were 16:1 those teeth would be far fewer, and further apart,….I’m not seeing 16:1 with that worm wheel…….

Right you are, that looks like the ones I'm talking about.

I measured several of the Weaver and Williams brass that came through here, and some did have up to 44:1 gear ratios.  With the motor screaming at 8,000 RPM, they were doing around 38 scale MPH.  I never saw one with 72:1 gear ratio, that wouldn't have much of a top end I suspect!

Right you are, that looks like the ones I'm talking about.

Yes, the caveat being the die cast 2-8-0 that Weaver built with the integral gear box as part of the frame. That locomotive has a better gear ratio not quite as steep as we see in the brass engines……I wanna say the die cast 2-8-0’s are in the 20:1 ratio,…..but clearly the OP’s model is a brass engine, with a fully divorced gear box,…

Pat

@harmonyards posted:

If Scott greases and lubes everything, and she still screams, he can swap out the 550 motor for a 555, it won’t cure it, but it may make it a lot more tolerable,…..auction sites sell them for small money, and that’s a direct bolt on swap….

I keep a couple of the Mabuchi 550 motors on hand, they're cheap and I see a surprising number of Weaver and Williams steam with defective motors.  If free-running they draw more than around 2x what the free-running 550 draws, I swap them out.  I've found motors that draw several amps free-running, I expect more like 200-300 milliamps.

I keep a couple of the Mabuchi 550 motors on hand, they're cheap and I see a surprising number of Weaver and Williams steam with defective motors.  If free-running they draw more than around 2x what the free-running 550 draws, I swap them out.  I've found motors that draw several amps free-running, I expect more like 200-300 milliamps.

Correct, ….the 550’s I’ve come across are all amp hogs,…..more than likely so they can spin to oblivion because as we noted earlier in this conversation, all those Weaver/Willaims brass engines are geared to the moon,…..you give up a touch of top end speed swapping to the 555, but the trade off is it doesn’t sound like it gonna explode at any given second……those 550’s sound more like a Cessna trying to clear a runway than a model train,…..😉

Pat

So, packing the gear box with Red and Tacky didn't change anything unfortunately. So, I used the old auto mechanic trick of using a screwdriver to touch parts of the engine and put my ear to the handle to see what made the most noise. The motor was very quiet. The top of the gear box was slightly more noisy, but the screw holding the bracket for the top of the gear box was the loudest. I discovered that if I removed the screw and raised the bracket, the noise lessened. I ended up putting 3 flat washers under the screw and that has significantly reduced the screaming noise. The grinding noise is still there, but over all a lot of the noise is gone. There is still a faint screaming noise. Raising the bracket raises the top gear off the lower gear, so not sure if that is the best solution, but the engine seems to run ok. See the videos for shell off and shell on performance. I'm just concerned that raising the top gear will cause damage. Any thoughts ?

Scott

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@DFG56 posted:

Raising the bracket raises the top gear off the lower gear, so not sure if that is the best solution, but the engine seems to run ok. See the videos for shell off and shell on performance. I'm just concerned that raising the top gear will cause damage. Any thoughts ?



AAMOF, that may be a big problem! The mesh of those gears is critical, and weaver gearboxes aren't known for their robustness in the best of times!  I'd find out what's really going on, but loosening the mesh of the gears sounds like a really bad idea.

@DFG56 posted:

That's what I thought you'd say. Well, then, I'm at a loss as to how to proceed. I don't see anything else that is adjustable or that I can take apart.

What you said about the bracket raising & lowering the worm off the worm wheel makes no sense, all of the years I’ve been doing this, I’ve never seen a gear box with an adjustment screw……I believe the bracket you’re referencing raises & lowers the pitch of the gear box angle. That bracket should “float” either on rubber pads, or on a spring. If you piled washers on it, and in affect, locked it down to the chassis, you’ve effectively put that gear box in a bind. That gear box needs freedom to roam ever so slightly, the drivers are on a suspension system. Thus, the gear box needs to be allowed to follow the suspension travel. The noise you’re hearing now coming from the gearbox is the gearbox in a bind. The screaming noise is coming from that crappy 550 3 pole motor. Perhaps you missed my reply regarding a 555 motor swap. That would be an ok upgrade and will certainly take a lot of the harshness out of that engine. You’re gonna have to reevaluate how you modified that gear box mount, and ditch the noisy 550 motor, otherwise, you’re just banging your head against the wall,…..

Pat

@gunny posted:

Why does it look like the left rear driver is off the track in your video? I had a Lionel Berkshire new from factory that had a bent frame. They replaced the engine. Trainz might take it back.

Gunny

It's because it's missing the traction tire. The one's I have are too big and keep coming off. I'll have to find the right size.

Scott

Well, I took the entire engine chassis apart tonight and managed to put it back together without losing any parts. WHEW !!

The whine is still there, but is better. I'll try playing with the number of washers to get the alignment better. Hopefully that will do it. Time for bed. Back at it tomorrow. Thanks for all your help and suggestions.

Scott

What Pat (harmonyards) said about the gearbox alignment is spot-on.  By raising the front of the gearbox, you're actually forcing things into poor alignment.  Your loco ran quieter that way, because the "balls" of the dogbone shaft coupling between the motor and the gearbox were constrained and no longer free to rattle around.

One thing to add:  I think your existing motor is actually a Mabuchi RS-545.  This is a small loco; I don't believe that Weaver used the RS-550 because it didn't fit, so unfortunately the 555 won't fit either.  A small Pittman like a 9432 would be a nice upgrade over the stock motor, it would also reduce the top speed a little.  But I don't think the motor is where most of the noise is coming from.  There are other things you could do to mask the noise.  But try to solve the root cause of the problem first!

@Ted S posted:

What Pat (harmonyards) said about the gearbox alignment is spot-on.  By raising the front of the gearbox, you're actually forcing things into poor alignment.  Your loco ran quieter that way, because the "balls" of the dogbone shaft coupling between the motor and the gearbox were constrained and no longer free to rattle around.

One thing to add:  I think your existing motor is actually a Mabuchi RS-545.  This is a small loco; I don't believe that Weaver used the RS-550 because it didn't fit, so unfortunately the 555 won't fit either.  A small Pittman like a 9432 would be a nice upgrade over the stock motor, it would also reduce the top speed a little.  But I don't think the motor is where most of the noise is coming from.  There are other things you could do to mask the noise.  But try to solve the root cause of the problem first!

Ted, the motor in the OP’s engine has the hallmarks of the 550, …..it could be a 545 as you mentioned….the white plastic end cap was the tell-tale for me,….yes, a Pittman would be a superb upgrade, but would require more involved modifications, like boring the flywheel, etc,……

Pat

@DFG56 posted:

So, packing the gear box with Red and Tacky didn't change anything unfortunately. So, I used the old auto mechanic trick of using a screwdriver to touch parts of the engine and put my ear to the handle to see what made the most noise. The motor was very quiet.

Is there not a bushing on each end of the shaft that the worm is mounted on ? On all the Samhongsa gearboxes which I have worked on the shaft the worm is on has bearings on each side of the worm and they are captive within the clamshells of the gearbox thus the gear mesh is not user adjustable. That screw with spring should adjust the angle the gearbox shafts meets the motor shaft. I cannot be certain but the shaft coming from the flywheel looks to be meeting the worm shaft at quite an acute angle. That would put a side thrust pulling up on the rear bearing of the gearbox. That in turn would be holding the worm against the worm wheel even though the front bearing is not in place. The rear bearing is acting as a fulcrum. Looking at the grease oozing out of the front of the gearbox makes me think the front bearing is not in place on the worm shaft. I posted photos back around 2018 - 19 showing a version of that gearbox where the worm wheel also acts as an idle gear if you want to look at my earlier posts. The worm shaft however has the bearings I speak of showing in those photos.  I have to leave now but will return Sunday night and will re-post those pix when I return.  The pix in that discussion are of a Williams / Samhongsa loco with a 42:1 gearbox and I have a series of pix showing what I did to eleminate the whine from the mabuchi 550 three pole motor they are quite prone to whine. Five pole motors push less air around and don't whine as much.    All said, I suspect you may be missing the front bearing on that gearbox.            j

@JohnActon posted:

Is there not a bushing on each end of the shaft that the worm is mounted on ? On all the Samhongsa gearboxes which I have worked on the shaft the worm is on has bearings on each side of the worm and they are captive within the clamshells of the gearbox thus the gear mesh is not user adjustable. That screw with spring should adjust the angle the gearbox shafts meets the motor shaft. I cannot be certain but the shaft coming from the flywheel looks to be meeting the worm shaft at quite an acute angle. That would put a side thrust pulling up on the rear bearing of the gearbox. That in turn would be holding the worm against the worm wheel even though the front bearing is not in place. The rear bearing is acting as a fulcrum. Looking at the grease oozing out of the front of the gearbox makes me think the front bearing is not in place on the worm shaft. I posted photos back around 2018 - 19 showing a version of that gearbox where the worm wheel also acts as an idle gear if you want to look at my earlier posts. The worm shaft however has the bearings I speak of showing in those photos.  I have to leave now but will return Sunday night and will re-post those pix when I return.  The pix in that discussion are of a Williams / Samhongsa loco with a 42:1 gearbox and I have a series of pix showing what I did to eleminate the whine from the mabuchi 550 three pole motor they are quite prone to whine. Five pole motors push less air around and don't whine as much.    All said, I suspect you may be missing the front bearing on that gearbox.            j

Thanks John. I did not find your previous posts, so if you have any pix showing how to work on this gearbox, I would appreciate them.

Scott

Scott, I'm not at home yet however the gearbox is easily removed. Remove the bottom cap and the gearbox lifts off . Then the two halves of the clamshell are held together with a couple screws. There are likely some screws which connect the gearbox to that arm with the screw and spring which come loose also.                                  j

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