Servicing and trouble shooting videos

Ronald Dodd, a member of the HRCA who has had many memorable layouts which he has shown on UTube, has just posted 3 videos on servicing and repairing HD locos. They really are excellent and hands on so you should be able to use them easily to repair any problems that your locos may have. They are

Cleaning and lubricating

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=hYyIBWWrsBo

Adjusting brushes and pick ups

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&list=UUBsdZ5pGeFUfk9kyf8XCDww&v=B87x3AqGGGI

Fault finding and non runners

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&list=UUBsdZ5pGeFUfk9kyf8XCDww&v=EN5nlPIObNc

Many thanks to Ronald for posting his videos – very useful indeed

Mallard

In July 2012 I had a comment posted by Mike Horton that he had some HD in his garage and wanted to dispose of it. The slight problem was that he lived in the USA. I contacted Marwan Nusair, a well known and highly respected collector of all things HD for many years who just happens also to live in the US. My contact was out of the blue but Marwan responded very positively, contacted Mike and they decided that Marwan would buy his collection.

One of the items was a Mallard which Marwan recognised was the one “normal priced” HD loco that I was missing and he offered it to me. He serviced, remagged it and sent it over to me, thanks to paypal the transaction went very smoothly. So now I am the proud owner of an HD Mallard to run alongside Silver King.

So from the UK in the early sixties to the US and back to the UK in the 2012’s this is a very well travelled loco which runs as good as new. They certainly built them well.

My thanks to Mike for contacting me and to Marwan for all his excellent work on the loco, much appreciated. Picture to be added

 

New Aquisitions

Although I am behind in writing the Current Layout page I have still been running and buying a couple of locos. The first mentioned some time ago was a Stanier 3 cylinder 2-6-4T a kit built loco based a HD chassis. It is an excellent runner but is unnumbered and has no railway identification. It is in a dirty black and looks the part of a late BR engine uncared for and never cleaned.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Then came an Ivatt 2-6-2T the precursor of the Standard 2MT made by Bachmann and fitted with a short Marklin skate to turn it into 3 rail.

And in between a strange one a diesel which was very cheap, isn’t a great runner as it is very light but is very impressive in its size

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Finally we have a Trix Southern region Buffet Car

Pick ups for 3 rail conversions

I was asked in the comments to post some pictures of the types of pick ups used for conversion from 2 rail to 3 rail. So here goes.

The first one is a

Hornby M7 converted

using a Marklin full size skid.

Then we have a Hornby London Transport Pannier Tank converted using springy metal with cups on the ends.

 

 

 

A Triang Jinty uses a similar system.

 

 

 

 

 

 

A Graham Farish 0-6-0PT, same idea but execution is a bit grim.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The basic springy metal pick-up as seen on an Hornby N2

 

 

 

 

 

 

A Trix 0-6-0T with an original pick-up.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The conversion of the HD 2 rail 0-6-0T shows each possibility

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Above we the official conversion using two small HD pick ups

Then we have the Marklin skate but probably a carriage skate rather than a loco skate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Followed by good old springy wire

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

As long as the insulated wheels are earthed properly, usually by leaving the 2 rail pick ups in place but connecting then to earth all the conversions run well. The original HD pick ups and the Marklin skid will have a much longer life than any of the bent wire types as the copper they are made of will wear out with running.

Note that all conversions of plastic bodied locos, the Graham Farish one is diecast, result in the three rail pick-up slightly raising the driving wheels leading to inferior traction. If it is possible add weight to improve pulling power but in general a plastic bodied converted engine will not pull more than 2 HD coaches unless you are very lucky. However many of these tank engines run on branch lines and 2 coaches were a normal load.

I have more pictures but they all revolve around the same type of pick-ups.

All of my Wrenn conversions use normal HD pick-ups as they originated from HD and therefore genuine pick-ups will fit easily.

Please add a comment if you want more information but please note that all of my conversions have been bought in, I have not done any conversions myself.

 

Dublo spares supplier

I needed a rear pony for a HD 2-6-4T and immediately went to MTrains as they are on my links page and had been recommended by people commenting on the website. I am very pleased to report that I received excellent service and a well packaged pony truck arrived at a very reasonable price. Only possible improvement is if they took PayPal. I know that this would add 3% to their costs but I think that their prices could rise by this amount without a problem and would add business from outside the UK. The pictures of the spares on the website is definitely an added bonus.

Links Tested

I tested all the links on 27th February. The link to Southern Railway Photo Net shows Account Suspended so this is not working. All other links are working fine.

Whilst searching to see if the Southern Photos site had moved to a new domain owner I came across this which is a collection of pictures of the Southern Railway of the USA. Interesting but probably not interesting enough to add to the links page. But then I went to the Home Page typed in UK in the Country box and found 9,190 pictures of railways in the UK. Browsing this website could seriously damage your health. This link has been added.

Chuffers.com, Elaine’s Trains and Shunters Junction selling HD and other makes have been added.

Lickey Incline added with brief histories of HD, Trix etc and other items of interest. Worth a browse

If you know of a link to a useful 3 rail site or supplier etc add it as a comment to this posting.

If, like me, you have some old diecast Dinky and Corgi toys of a similar age to Hornby Dublo then you need to spend time here an excellent website for information and history but also has valuations of many of the items. Fascinating reading but beware you just might lose a lot of hours combing through this site.

 

More Playcraft

At the beginning of the year I bought a couple of Playcraft wagons which were made by Jouef for the UK market. I also gave a link to the Playcraft site. Now thanks to ebay I have added a Playcraft loco but one with a bit of a difference. This one has a HD B0-Bo chassis under the plastic body of a Playcraft D6100 diesel. There is absolutely no modifications to the HD chassis and as a result is an excellent runner with good pulling power and of course HD couplings. The D6100 is a model of a Class 21 diesel whereas the HD Bo Bo is a model of a Class 20 diesel. Clearly my D6100 now has the wrong bogie frames and seems to have been repainted into Brunswick Green with full yellow ends but within the bounds it looks and runs well. As mentioned in my earlier post Playcraft was made to the continental HO scale so how does it fit in? Well in actual fact it is hardly noticeable as the D8000 BoBo was a pretty big engine. The prototype Class 20 is 46 ft 9 ins and the Class 21 was 51ft 6 ins so in real life the difference would certainly have been noticeable but in 00 gauge, 4 mm = 1 ft the difference amounts to 20 mm which is less than an inch so not really a problem. Another one to add to my modified HD locos rather than a Playcraft original.

Strangely as part of the same purchase the seller included an original D6100 in 2rail form. This looks as if it has hardly been used but whenever it was used it must have been dropped as it has a broken buffer beam. It is of little use to me as a 3 rail only runner but an interesting historical piece of kit.

SCARM

When I updated the links last November I added a new Track Layout programme called SCARM (Simple Computer Aided Railway Modeller) but confessed that I had not used it.

Now I have given it a go. It is very easy to pick up and produce a potential layout.  The

 

programme has many track systems and you click on the arrow on the left column and there is a dropdown menu, pick Hornby and then you have a choice of 2, 3 rail or the modern track. Click on 3 rail and all of the available three rail track appears in this column. Click the top left hand corner of the scale to change to inches and use the scroll wheel on the main page to change the size of the layout. Use a right click to draw a base board and in this programme it can be an L shape or T shape as well as being rectangular. Draw the size and shape you want instructions are given.

Starting is easy. Click on the red arrow and place it on the board where you want to start. Click on the rail you want and it will appear on the board. The rail on the baseboard now has a grey arrow at one end and a red at the other. Clicking on the next rail adds it to the red end. If you want to change the end click on the grey end and it becomes red and the next rail adds here. Very simple. Curves show left or right, points give 3 choices its all straightforward. When you want to change where you are working click on the grey end of the rail, it turns red and you start again from this position.

It even has a 3D option to help you visualise the layout. The only problem I have encountered is that in the 3D option you can take a photo of the layout as a bitmap or jpg. I have done this, the file size states that there is something there but I cannot see it – not sure why. So I have made do with screen shots to give some idea of the 3D capability.

The programme does have the Travelling Post Office and signals but no buildings as yet.

I think it works very well and if you are exploring layout possibilities it is certainly the programme to use.

Enjoy producing your next layout, whether you will build it is, of course, another matter.

 

 

Early New Year Purchase

On my small inner oval I have a train of an Graham Farish (Grafar) 0-6-0T with two Farish GWR coaches. I saw on ebay a boxed set of two Grafar GWR Ventilated vans which would go nicely at the head of the carriages. At £10 they were a good buy and look and run very well. So now we have a complete Grafar train.

One that I bought last year was a Hornby Black 5 converted excellently to 3 rail by Neil. I never could understand why Hornby Dublo did the 8F rather than the Black 5 which was a much more popular and numerous engine and would not have required a completely new chassis. This is a tender drive loco but actually runs very well and has very good pulling power. The draw back of these later Hornby is that they often have traction tyre which with a dirty track pick up oil and can stretch and come off. This problem also applies to an extent to those HD locos which had traction tyres (BoBo, CoBo and CoCo diesels.

Playcraft

Following the last News item I have looked more closely at the Jouef tanker that I bought from the model shop. In fact I bought another wagon from Jouef the last time I visited which when I looked more closely on the underside had Jouef for Playcraft moulded in the plastic. A quick check on the tanker showed the same thing, So Playcraft with Peco type couplings ideal for HD except that they are HO and not OO scale. The history of Playcraft shows it to be very low cost system which did not last for very long but that their are still some enthusiasts with a collection of them . Well worth a look to add to your knowledge of the history of toy trains in the UK.