5. Gearbox and Motor
The assembly of the gearbox from High Level Kits has been a bit fraught (more intricate than I expected), though the result is working perfectly.
The rod for the layshaft is 2 mm diameter steel and the two axle bushes are for the 1/8 inch Slater's axle. The instructions call up 1 mm wire to brace the frame but I didn’t find any of this in the package so I used some 0.9 mm wire from my spares box.
- However hard I tried, I could not persuade the worm gear, its spacer and its shim washer to all fit inside the frame. Eventually I took the vernier to this combination and found it about 4 thou too long to fit into the space available. So I took about 7 thou off one end of the spacer and then everything slipped into place.
- The grub screw supplied for the final drive gear is a metric size somewhere below 10BA and barely 2 mm long with a slot in one end. This took me beyond my threshold of patience after I dropped it on the carpet for the third time (it's still there) so I tapped the boss of the gear 10BA and put in a steel screw with a cheese head.
- The worm did not seem to mesh sufficiently closely with its worm gear. I took a file to the boss on the end of the motor, and opened up the mounting holes in the frame; and thus created enough movement to make a binding worm/worm gear combination. I think it is best to make a tight mesh and then ease this off, otherwise you never know if the mesh is quite right.
I used the lathe to face off the ends of the lay shaft, to shorten the spacer to fit, and to face off the new screw for the final drive gear. I could have done these with files but the lathe makes a better-looking job. I also used the lathe to open out the boss of the final drive gear to let it slip over the 1/8 inch Slater’s axle and I would find this operation difficult do accurately with hand tools. I used several tapered broaches to open up holes in the frames and in the bearings; the broaches are much more controllable than a rat-tail file.
Having got through this, the first trial installation into the model was straightforward. I filed two notches into the frame of the gearbox to clear the brake rod and help the motor to stand upright. The worm gear is barely 1 mm thick - this might prove inadequate for 0 gauge but I can forget about it until it fails.
The mechanism will be visible from the behind the loco but not from the sides.
The best news is, the chassis makes a respectable speed on a 4.5 volt supply and manages most of 1 foot per second (scale 30 mph) on 7 volts. So the choice of the 45:1 reduction ratio for the gearbox was the right choice.