Friday, September 25, 2020
Saturday, September 19, 2020
(LGB) 25554 - reporting from the wild side
This is a story straight from Klaus' workshop
Tom calls and starts ranting:" I have an (^***&#)- engine here that runs only for 3 feet and then stops. For no obvious reason. It doesn't display headlights and the sound is not working".
Klaus asks:" What type of engine is it?"
Tom:" (LGB) 25554- the green one"
Klaus now asks Tom what kind of power supply he is using (standard analog 5 Amp). This excluded a motor going bad which would have overpowered a starter set throttle. As Tom didn't want to mess with it he shipped the engine to Klaus.(LGB) 25554 by Maerklin/Simba-Dickie |
Klaus' precision testing device - the voltage generator |
the wheels were turning and when the voltage was raised above 4 Volts the Amperage would shoot beyond 4 Amps. Klaus immediately stopped the test to prevent further damage to the engine. Now Klaus opened up the engine to find a strange configuration of electronics in the rear body.
There was a soundboard (MTS) mounted to the base plate held by only one screw and an MTS onboard decoder mounted to a lead weight. Turned out it was the lead weight of a Forney. Now, this was something special.
Meanwhile a bit of research revealed that the engine was made somewhere in 2010 by Maerklin possibly while the takeover by Simba-Dickie took place. That meant China was still a possible manufacturing place before Simba-Dickie turned to open up Gyor/Hungary.
Back at the workshop the next step was to isolate those motor blocks and test them individually with regular DC without having the internal electronics of the locomotive connected. The front motor block did not pick up any power and only the motor worked. The rear motor block picked up power with the motor being OK but the motor would even run when power was only supplied to the power shoes. As this was a DCC motor block track power and motor leads should have been totally isolated from each other. So question was why did the motor run with power supplied to the power shoes? There was only one solution: a massive short between the motor leads and track power pick-up.
Opening up the lower lid of the rear motor block revealed two dislocated power bus bars. The bus bars were made out of sheet metal which was about half the thickness as the regular LGB bars would be. So it was possible that the lower lid was closed with the power bars dislocated and nobody noticing it. The imprints in the bus bars that were made by the lid and the body of the motor block confirmed this theory. With the lower lid screws being untouched it was clear that this happened in the factory. Unfortunately it also proved that there was no quality control performed in the factory.
Basically the same condition was found in the front motor block.
Klaus repaired the motor blocks and inspected the onboard decoder which turned out to be fried and
the yellow line circles the burnt decoder part |
was replaced as well. Klaus programmed a new onboard decoder to match the locomotive and reassembled the engine.
Saturday, September 12, 2020
LGB Firebox Light - A Klaus Creation Part 2
The light bulbs of the choice had to be the 5 Volt plug-in bulbs which Klaus colored manually. The reflector was initially a piece of aluminum foil. Peter Stock, a close friend of Klaus since childhood times, designed the electronics. Klaus then cut open the firebox door of the LGB Mogul to insert the firebox-light parts and everything was implemented in a pre-production 2019 Mogul body.
cutout in the firebox door |
The initial pause between firebox activation was 45 seconds long. So everybody kept watching the locomotive closely until the firebox lit up again. Surprisingly the light even illuminated parts of the track between the loco and the tender just as in reality. Later in production the pause was reduced to about 8 seconds.
Old LGB factory in Nuremberg |
Klaus demonstrated this locomotive and firebox to Wolfgang Richter and Gunter Ruhland in Nuremberg. Everybody was surprised and exited about this idea. They wanted to implement this product into the Mogul and Klaus was asked to finalize the product for mass production; namely design a reflector which can be utilized in the final product.
Klaus made several molds out of Dental Silicone - see below - to produce multiple reflectors of the same shape which then can be manually altered. The reflectors themselves were made of Dental Plaster. That way Klaus was able to alter the reflector surface manually to find out which surface works the best.
Note the 2nd piece from above: Klaus grinding bit surface - aka his "signature" |
A couple of weeks later Klaus found out that tiny dents in the reflector made by a ball shaped grinding bit delivered the best results. LGB then had an electrode made according to this reflector and used this electrode to manufacture the injection mold for the reflector. This happened by way of the electrode being used in electro-discharge machining. This is the reason why the mass-produced reflector even still today shows the manual work of Klaus and his grinding bit - just like his signature.
Klaus firebox light parts before mass production |
It became a huge success. After furnishing the Mogul with the firebox-light LGB installed it in other steam engines as well. All leading model train manufacturers picked up the idea and manufactured their own versions. A number of little electronic firms started offering those firebox lights in all their variations. Today it is a standard feature for pretty much all steam engine model trains regardless of scale.
Here is a brief video of Klaus original firebox light in a very old LGB Mogul:
Monday, September 7, 2020
LGB Firebox Light - A Klaus Creation
One warm summer night in the mid 1980's Klaus was sitting on his back porch.
Now he was relaxing, enjoying his LGB layout with an American freight train passing by. Led by a Mogul and trailed by a lighted caboose. After a while he noticed that watching the loco go by all he could actually see was the dominant headlight followed by dark ghost cars and the lighted caboose marking the end of the train.
Courtesy of Hollyhobo |
Klaus had a clear sense that something was missing here.
There was a stoker standing in the front of the (Mogul) tender apparently doing something but he could neither see the engineer nor the stoker. Klaus assumed that the stoker was about to open the firebox door fixing to shoveling coal into the firebox. This must have some influence on the lighting situation in the cabin and front of the tender. The stoker must be standing right in the midst of this light. And that was it.
Now, how did he put this into reality? His first idea was to install 3 or 4 lights hidden somewhere in the rear part of the boiler shining through narrow tubes single light beams onto the stoker. The drawback of this idea was that when the engine passed by there could have been a chance that a bystander could look right into one of those lights. Basically, a good idea but not close enough to reality.
This made Klaus realize that there is actually more to reality than initially hits the eye. In a real steam loco there is a light source (fire box) which illuminates the control cabin and the stoker and the front of the tender. This light source should not be kept a secret. The bitter truth is that the stoker opens the fire
courtesy of telegraph.co.uk |
To install the firebox light Klaus would have to remove the lower half of the firebox door in the rear boiler part of the Mogul. Behind the still closed upper half firebox door the lights could hide. The light would be reflected by a reflector behind the lower open firebox door. This would even give the impression of embers glowing.
A smart electronic board would control the light bulbs.
He had it all worked out - in theory. Now he had to translate all into reality: finding the fitting light, creating the needed electronic board, cutting the Mogul open (again...)
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++to be continued ...........................
Saturday, August 29, 2020
Motor Trouble - Symptoms and Remedy
Worn-out Buehler LGB engine motors |
Or: from the worm gear via an idler gear onto the gear wheel on the axle e.g. Mogul
Wear and Tear - Damage
Years of operation affect mainly the gear wheel- connected directly to the worm drive- wearing it out. Damage may also occur due to mechanical stress or load e.g. the train is running unmonitored, derails partly and gets stuck somewhere along the track and keeps running in that stuck condition.
Or, your 2-year old son or grandson grabs the locomotive in full motion. This delivers too much power to the gear wheel as the gear wheel is forcibly stopped and the motor tries to keep running due to the electrical power supplied to the motor and the inertia of the motor. So the teeth on the gear wheel partly break off. This leads to an uneven and un-synchronized movement of the two powered axles of the locomotive. In engines with connecting rods this will lead eventually to a blockage of the drive train.
Sometimes people notice that the loco runs significantly slower than usual with a decreased pulling power. Or the engine stops frequently. In this case the motor itself is giving up and pulling excessive amperage. In case the user is operating with a starter kit transformer this transformer will reach the end of its performance and shut down for cooling. When a motor is giving up it regularly transforms the energy supplied into heat which will be transported via the motor axle to the worm drive. The heated worm drive will eventually destroy/melt the gear wheel connected to it. That ends the transmission of power. And the motor stops running.
The very early design of the Buehler motor provided exchangeable carbon brushes. One could visually check on the wear of those brushes by how far they were worn out. The later design is fully enclosed and therefor it is impossible to check on the wear. Buehler found out that when the brushes are worn out so are the bearings. So basically it did not make any sense to exchange the brushes. Nowadays the whole motor is being exchanged.
Brand new LGB Buehler motors. Top: long shaft motor. Bottom: short shaft motor |
TrainCraft by Klaus carries all required LGB types of Buehler motors. Klaus exchanges/ installs them in ALL types of LGB engines.
The first generation motorblock was made of two shells (left hand, right hand) which are very difficult to service. You will find them in the early Stainz locomotives , the 2080's Tank Steam loco (Brockenbahn) and the Crocodile (LGB 2040).
First you have to remove all connecting rods to free the wheels. Then you have to carefully remove the wheels and watch the spring loaded carbon brushes (the old type) which consist of a separate spring and carbon brush. If you're not careful the spring with the carbon brush would jump off and away.
Make sure to have those steel balls reinstalled with a new motor unless you install a later generation Buehler motor which has load bearings.
Now comes the tricky part:
When re-inserting the motor you need to make sure that both loco axles are synchronized in their position. If you don't do it now you will not be able to correct this mistake once the motor block is re-assembled. The end of the loco axles provide two beveled portions which position the wheels. The synchronization can be easily achieved visually by assuring the parallel position of the bevels of both axles.
Be careful when reinstalling the wheels because the spring loaded carbon brushes have to come in first.
Friday, August 21, 2020
LGBchen and Chloe - Conclusion
The LGB Chloe and Olomana type loco 0-4-2(T) saw their last appearance with the 1998 catalogs. After that LGB would revert back to the O & K industrial field loco 0-4-0. In 2000 they published a (hand model?) 22140 in the 2000 catalog which made it to market about a year later
LGB 22140 - Courtesy of catawiki.com |
accessory to LGB 22140 Courtesy of worthpoint.com |
LGB 23140 No 3 - Courtesy of worthpoint.com |
After the original LGB closed shop and Maerklin/Simba-Dickie took over it wasn't until 2011 that another LGBchen type was marketed. As the OLD LGB had done before it was re-utilized in a starter set, this time the LGB 70410. In 2016 and 2017 the Olamana and the Grizzly Flat would see a 'come-back'. It was the old mold but the plastic and the workmanship was not the same as under the old LGB.
LGB 23131 - Courtesy of lgb.com, price US$ 350.00 approx |
HJ Neumann was right and you dear reader are in luck: Klaus is here and ready to help with all your OLD LGB needs (and some new, too....)
Friday, August 14, 2020
LGB Chloe and LGBchen - Part 2
By 1995 the Chloe was manufactured and ready to be distributed:
LGB 20130 w/ LGB 30430 Grizzly Flats cars Courtesy of ebay.com/hrastovi42012 |
Courtesy of Champex-Linden |
advertised the Chloe prominently at first exclusively for the American market. A year later it was also offered to the German and European LGB customers. The ad already mentions the LGB 30430 Grizzly Flats cars that were offered at the same time but separately. The LGB 20130 listed for US$ 299.00 and the cars for US$ 59.00 each.
The complete package if purchased together would have looked like this:
LGB 20130 w/ LGB 30430 Grizzly Flats cars Courtesy of ebay.com/hrastovi42012 |
Also advertised in the LGB NEWS 1995 was the LGBchen 20140 which portrayed the industrial field loco of the late 1800's and early 1900's:
They were listed at US$ 269.00 and currently go for about US$ 390.00
By 1999 LGBoA listed both engines as "about to be sold out".
When sales volume in 1996 signaled a good market acceptance for both little engines LGB set out to do them again in a slightly varied manner. Thus the molds were reused into the LGB 22130
LGB 22130 - Courtesy of proxibid.com |
and the LGB 21140
LGB 21140 - Courtesy of ebay.com/sfelectric |
LGB 72560 - Courtesy of Only Trains |
LGB 72560 original packaging - Courtesy of liveauctions.com |
This set was originally advertised in the 1997 LGBoA Info 97 and the set was available that Christmas.
LGBoA Info 97 pg 2/2- Courtesy of Champex-Linden Focus on the middle of the photo to find the "Chloe" Christmas set |