Ralphmp
Registered

My Durango & Silverton Mogul has a bad case of wheelspin. It's so bad it can't haul itself round the layout without coming to a halt or a crawl with the wheels spinning. Add the tender and things are even worse! As minimum radius on the part of the layout I was using is R3, there is no gradient, and the wheelspin occurs both on straights and curves, I don't think it's a simple case of the loco struggling with the layout geometry. Also, as other locos ran around the layout OK, i don't think I have an issue with dirty/greasy track.
I bought the loco secondhand a while back and when the loco was demonstrated to me all seemed well, apart from the rear light not working (I was told this was a failed bulb but it actually proved to be the lead for the rear light was in the wrong socket on the main circuit board...). There wasn't much wear on the wheels and the pristine state of the body indicated it hadn't had a hard life outdoors. I confess I missed the "Made in China" stamping when I inspected it.
As I run DCC and the loco was Analog, I've installed a Massoth XLS decoder and firebox module. Whilst I was doing this I also fitted a new traction tyre. The loco ran fine on the rolling road at crawl, slow, medium and fast speeds with no trace of binding or slipping. However, when I tried it outside recently, the wheelspin problem immediately became apparent.
I tried pressing down on the loco whilst the wheels were spinning and it regained traction, so I taped a spare lead weight onto the cab roof to see if this would help matters but it didn't make any noticeable difference.
Before I start piling on more weights (and possibly overload the motor)I wondered if anyone else has encountered a similar issue with this loco type? If so, was it as as simple as the loco being "too light" or is there something else I should be looking at?
Thanks
I bought the loco secondhand a while back and when the loco was demonstrated to me all seemed well, apart from the rear light not working (I was told this was a failed bulb but it actually proved to be the lead for the rear light was in the wrong socket on the main circuit board...). There wasn't much wear on the wheels and the pristine state of the body indicated it hadn't had a hard life outdoors. I confess I missed the "Made in China" stamping when I inspected it.
As I run DCC and the loco was Analog, I've installed a Massoth XLS decoder and firebox module. Whilst I was doing this I also fitted a new traction tyre. The loco ran fine on the rolling road at crawl, slow, medium and fast speeds with no trace of binding or slipping. However, when I tried it outside recently, the wheelspin problem immediately became apparent.
I tried pressing down on the loco whilst the wheels were spinning and it regained traction, so I taped a spare lead weight onto the cab roof to see if this would help matters but it didn't make any noticeable difference.
Before I start piling on more weights (and possibly overload the motor)I wondered if anyone else has encountered a similar issue with this loco type? If so, was it as as simple as the loco being "too light" or is there something else I should be looking at?
Thanks