R/C Hudson Hunslet Project
R/C Hudson Hunslet Project
This is a little R/C electric loco I started making last year. Powered by 5 AA NiMh batteries with a compact R/C car Electronic Speed control, Just testing it with a 40Mhz AM receiver, eventually will have the full size Receiver replaced with a micro 40Mhz FM unit. Frames are just temporary aluminium strip. I've machined some from Brass and have some nice brass buffer beams and fabricated multi-height coupling too.
Loco performs well, gives a very scale speed with the worm reduction from the IP engineering gearbox, 1.5mm Footplate gives it a lot of weight too. Only 2 wheel drive as such a small prototype hard pressed to fit chain and sprockets to give 4 wheel drive.
Controllability is good and can inch forward a mm or so at a time with the car esc. It really needs a sep powersupply for the R/C though, maybe a 9volt PP3 battery.
I would have persevered with this loco but it's just really too small to fit in all the bits that I wanted.
http://alan-briggs.fotopic.net/p54392109.html
Loco performs well, gives a very scale speed with the worm reduction from the IP engineering gearbox, 1.5mm Footplate gives it a lot of weight too. Only 2 wheel drive as such a small prototype hard pressed to fit chain and sprockets to give 4 wheel drive.
Controllability is good and can inch forward a mm or so at a time with the car esc. It really needs a sep powersupply for the R/C though, maybe a 9volt PP3 battery.
I would have persevered with this loco but it's just really too small to fit in all the bits that I wanted.
http://alan-briggs.fotopic.net/p54392109.html
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I was going to make this in brass, the styrene was just a trial run to ensure everything fitted in. I like the look of it, the only problem, for the amount of work in fabricating the parts, it's really just too small to be of much use in a garden railway.
Also if I wanted to market the loco I can't see where it would fit in with the smaller white metal kits from the likes of IP and the bigger more toylike but still quite cheap IP Jessie etc.
I think i'll go back to it when I have some time free though, you can pretty much fit everything inside, even the miniature receiver can be poked away under the drivers seat, it would make a quite convincing scale model, but with full R/C and a fair bit of weight and quite torquey pulling power too.
I was thinking of producing a small 0-4-0 diesel battery loco with R/C, but have been looking at drawings of some of the small Rustons.
I'm still undecided though, but definitely based on actual prototype than freelance.
Also if I wanted to market the loco I can't see where it would fit in with the smaller white metal kits from the likes of IP and the bigger more toylike but still quite cheap IP Jessie etc.
I think i'll go back to it when I have some time free though, you can pretty much fit everything inside, even the miniature receiver can be poked away under the drivers seat, it would make a quite convincing scale model, but with full R/C and a fair bit of weight and quite torquey pulling power too.
I was thinking of producing a small 0-4-0 diesel battery loco with R/C, but have been looking at drawings of some of the small Rustons.
I'm still undecided though, but definitely based on actual prototype than freelance.
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Didn't IP do a hunslet that was all made out of lasercut styrene with little crude white metal axle boxes araldited onto the sides?
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Totally different, www.ipengineering.co.uk/page130.html .
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That http://www.ipengineering.co.uk/page130.html
is a looky likey to that http://home.fastnet.co.uk/gerrycork/amb ... -small.jpg
Which is a Hudson Hunslet
is a looky likey to that http://home.fastnet.co.uk/gerrycork/amb ... -small.jpg
Which is a Hudson Hunslet
Passengers are reminded not to tease the engines
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And this is a www.frheritage.org.uk/wiki/Harold
When it was green we use to take the poor thing seriously.
When it was green we use to take the poor thing seriously.
Thats a big old thing tho 39 hp! Mine is the 24 hp!SillyBilly wrote:And this is a www.frheritage.org.uk/wiki/Harold
When it was green we use to take the poor thing seriously.
I quite like my little loco finished in red primer and needing a bit of a superficial make over! It seems to be quite appropriate for a Small NG diesel. Runs pretty well, but dog slow, not very glamorous, in need of a paint job and with the gear needed to run it just tucked up inside the cab!
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Whats the verdict about this little Ruston for a possibility of making an R/C battery 16mm loco?
or ?
I've come across a set of drawings for the loco, and were thinking about the possibility of making it the contender for a small batch of garden railway loco models.
It is a typical small industrial loco, I rather like it, it's not pretty but it does look rather rugged and would make a nice little workhorse., plus it has the advantage of being a type that nobody has actually made a commercial kit of!
or ?
I've come across a set of drawings for the loco, and were thinking about the possibility of making it the contender for a small batch of garden railway loco models.
It is a typical small industrial loco, I rather like it, it's not pretty but it does look rather rugged and would make a nice little workhorse., plus it has the advantage of being a type that nobody has actually made a commercial kit of!
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Would be more for fun really, and maybe build a few to order depending on the interest. Batches would only be 10 or so at a time.made-in-england wrote:go for it!
Would you start with a small batch and work up or just make say 50 and try and flog em all?
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I've bought some Meccano Gears and some geared motors for the Ruston. I bodged a little rolling chassis together out of some meccano plates today.
Using a worm gear with a central output shaft, driving the two axles via sprockets and chain drives. Running it with an RS540 on 4.8 volts and it chuggs along quite happily! I'll need to do something with the axles and wheels as at present to fit everything within the 32mm gauge the sprockets are running slightly out of line. Actual loco will use a small 280 motor with a neat little reduction gearbox. When I get to test the loco with its r/c and electronic speed control I may have to tweak the reduction required to get more of a scale running speed.
I'm using the rcs train radio control as I've heard great things about it, should be an interesting project as it's all new ground for me!
I really wanted the wheels to fit with a grub screw rather than a press fit on the axles, so it's a little crowded fitting everything into such a tight space.
I'll keep you updated! Once I've got the running gear sorted I'll cnc up the frames and spacers to make the basis of a proper loco.
Using a worm gear with a central output shaft, driving the two axles via sprockets and chain drives. Running it with an RS540 on 4.8 volts and it chuggs along quite happily! I'll need to do something with the axles and wheels as at present to fit everything within the 32mm gauge the sprockets are running slightly out of line. Actual loco will use a small 280 motor with a neat little reduction gearbox. When I get to test the loco with its r/c and electronic speed control I may have to tweak the reduction required to get more of a scale running speed.
I'm using the rcs train radio control as I've heard great things about it, should be an interesting project as it's all new ground for me!
I really wanted the wheels to fit with a grub screw rather than a press fit on the axles, so it's a little crowded fitting everything into such a tight space.
I'll keep you updated! Once I've got the running gear sorted I'll cnc up the frames and spacers to make the basis of a proper loco.
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The 4.8 Volt battery was just one I had around to test the running gear. I've been advised to use 12 AA Batterys for the RCS system! Which is going to be a task fitting them all in as I'll have to have multiple packs mounted around the loco. One thing about it, it should have no worries about being too light to get any traction!
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