As I've mentioned before I inherited a quantity of Hornby Acho and Jouef from my Grandfather after he passed away in the early 70s. A recent re-organisation of the loft saw me digging out and looking through my modest collection. One loco in particular stands out, mainly because its never had a motor fitted whilst in my care;
A handsome loco, its in rather good condition partly due to the fact that it rarely left its box as it had no motor and therefore no play value. I've decided that its time for it to move again.
On scouring eBay I found this Dutch liveried loco, advertised as a poor/non-runner, which I thought might provide spares;
But although having a similar bodyshell the running gear is completly different. It has drive to one bogie only, whilst my Grandfathers loco had drive to both ends. It seems that Jouef at some stage developed a drive system that powered both bogies, and then fitted that system across its range. But, it looks like only on bogie type was developed, which was a short Co-Co unit unsuited to this type of loco. So, my Grandfathers old model, which is fitted with the superior drive unit, has the wrong type of bogies fitted. In the photo below the blue loco has the correct bogies and the green loco is fitted with bogies that are too short;
A good look around the 'net shows that the short bogie is in fact the type fitted to Jouef's model of CC40101. So one was aquired cheaply in the hope that it would provide the rest of the missing drivetrain. But alas no, it had single bogie drive. However, it did donate a pinion to the blue Dutch loco above;
So, after a bit more scouring I found a second silver electric, this time with both bogies driven, but with an even worse bodyshell (in fact it looks like mice had been nibbling it!);
So, both my Grandfather's loco and the second silver job were stripped down and the motor (a coggy 3 pole job) swapped over;
The silver loco also donated its drive pinions, along with a retaining 'c' washer, a bulb, part of the pick-ups and both couplings. The motor has been cleaned, oiled and I cleaned the the brushes by rubbing the working faces on wet and dry.
Here it is on test;
The drive on one of the bogies is a little tight, hopefully it'll loosen up. If not there's two spares that can be used. Note that only four rollers are used, despite the loco being a Co-Co the middle axles on each bogie don't actually do anything, in fact the wheels are a smaller diameter than the outers.
And a last photo, still on the rolling road but now with the body and couplings fitted;
The rolling road by the way is made by DCC Concepts and is modular, in that by fitting different spacers 9mm, 12mm, 16.5mm and 18.2/18.83mm gauges are covered.
Some, perhaps those that are used to my more 'serious' modelling posts, might consider this exercise to be a monumental waste of time. However, seeing this loco run for the first time in the 40+ years that its been in my posession has given me a great deal of satisfaction. I'm sure that my Grandfather would be pleased as well.
Paul.
I think restoring the loco to working order was a seriously good use of your time and money. When I serviced and repaired all my childhood OO gauge models there was something extremely satisfying about seeing a model working properly again.
ReplyDeleteI'm also a fan of that rolling road. Mine has seen quite a bit of use since I bought it, although it does struggle with some of the smaller 009 locos as bits of bodywork tend to foul the rollers.
The loco's a bit noisy and needs further fettling, but for now I'm happy with it. Apparently when my Grandfather's effects were being sorted through a motor was found in his hankerchief drawer, I don't know what happened to that but I can't help but think that it belonged in my loco. Its a shame that I have nowhere to run it.
DeleteThe rolling road is very usefull, but as you say not so good for the smaller OO9 jobs. I like it because its simple, doesn't take up much room when not in use and I can use it with everything that I build, in EM, HO, OOn3 and OO9.
I have one of these sat in front of me as I type. One of the bogies is smashed but there is still a motor inside. It nearly became a pantograph donor for another project. Now I'm wondering what to do with it .
ReplyDeleteYou could send it this way Phil...
DeleteDonor locos for spares do come up cheaply on Ebay if you're patient. For its age its rather a nice model.
Nice touch Paul. Some things have more value than the latest all singing, all dancing offerings. I'm sure your gramdfather would be happy with your efforts!
ReplyDeleteRegards
Ian
Thanks Ian.
DeleteYou're right, despite its crudeness I value this loco, and the others in my collection, rather highly. After all its my Grandfather that I have to thank for my interest in all things railway.
I have his lathe as well (a pre-war Myford), but unfortunetely don't have room to set it up so it lives in storage for now.