arnoldb
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- Apr 8, 2009
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Dennis, on my steam loco (like Dean mentioned) I put a drop of oil into the exhaust and push the loco in reverse to suck the oil into the cylinders. Having said that, my loco runs on wobblers so the oil goes straight where its intended. I'm not sure if this method will get enough oil into the valve chest to lubricate a D-valve like on your model - also, with the slip-eccentric it might be tricky to reverse it far enough to get the oil into the cylinder and valve before the engine reverses and just blows it out again.
A simple suggestion I can make, that is if you decide you want to regularly steam up the tractor, is to add a small "access plug" close to the cylinder on the main steam line that you can unscrew to put a drop of oil into between steam-ups. The main thing is you don't want oil going back into the boiler.
So, apologies; I don't think there's a "non-modification" solution in your case which is a real pity. Having said that though, I don't think you need to be overly concerned; the wear on your engine will be relatively slow, as the steam itself will actually act as lubrication to a lesser extent on models with low pressure (i.e. "wetter steam") boilers.
Regards, Arnold
A simple suggestion I can make, that is if you decide you want to regularly steam up the tractor, is to add a small "access plug" close to the cylinder on the main steam line that you can unscrew to put a drop of oil into between steam-ups. The main thing is you don't want oil going back into the boiler.
So, apologies; I don't think there's a "non-modification" solution in your case which is a real pity. Having said that though, I don't think you need to be overly concerned; the wear on your engine will be relatively slow, as the steam itself will actually act as lubrication to a lesser extent on models with low pressure (i.e. "wetter steam") boilers.
Regards, Arnold