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Re: Old Kit Tips: Model Power E Units


 

Hello All,

I haven't responded much have lurking mostly. But this subject I have some experience with. I have several of these E units in various B&M pain schemes (custom painted) 3 E7s and 1 E8. I also used sell these in my hobby shop years ago. Yes they are noisey, but I don't it is the flywheel so much as what I found was the driveline joint in from of the flywheel was the culprit. Solution a judicial application of electrical tape in the joint quiet the drive considerably. In fact made the sound like had sound system with at least one 567 EMD humming away.

Winston Stone
Former owner of
Model Railroad Specialist South
Hobby shop and Custom Painting.

--- In yardbirdtrains@..., <raul@...> wrote:


--
Ifound that with the original MP E units the flywheels were out of balance and due to their size
contributed to the noise. Elimination of them helped and Hobbytown universals should help
also. Roger Aultman


-- Jeff Pellas <jppellas@...> wrote:

=============
Nathan,
As for the Model Power E units, I have a few of those and they are loud! I originally acquired them thinking about combining them with Hobbytown E-7 shells but I figured the resulting loco would be far too heavy to be practical (although I've seen dummys done that way). As far as the gear noise goes, the more run time on those locos, the louder they seem to get. Not sure why this is because you'd think the opposite would be the case. I think the main culprit is a loose fit of the universal gear linking the drive shaft and the power truck. There are two ways to alleviate this: One is simply keeping the power trucks well lubed because the less torque the universal has to transfer, the less the slop comes into play and the quieter the loco will be. The other remedy would be replacing the universal linkage altogether. In fact I would advise doing this because I believe the linkage is just too light weight for what it is required to do. I think an Athearn linkage could be adapted. A Hobbytown universal set would be ideal (if you could marry it to the Model power parts) because they can handle practically any amount of torque and you can customize the length of the drive shaft.


Jeff
jppellas@...




-----Original Message-----
From: Nathan Rich <thaddeusthudpucker@...>
To: yardbirdtrains <yardbirdtrains@...>
Sent: Fri, Feb 22, 2013 12:52 pm
Subject: [yardbirdtrains] Old Kit Tips






I picked up some old Tyco/Mantua kits at a show recently and I want to put them together. They're mid 70's vintage and complete, and I got them for a steal. I'll use Dan's can motors in place of the stock motors and install DCC as I go. Can anybody give any tips on putting these together? I have a Pacific, a mikado, a General, and I can't remember what the other is (they're at home and I'm on the road).
Also, at the same show I picked up some old Model Power E units, any tips on quieting them down? If I can get the noise down they seem like they'd pull like beasts.
Thanks!
Nathan Rich

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