Beginners Ask Trains Ask MR: Help! My steam locomotive’s front trucks keep derailing

Ask MR: Help! My steam locomotive’s front trucks keep derailing

By Steven Otte | December 26, 2021

The issue could be with the truck, the wheels, or the track

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A profile view of the front of an HO scale steam locomotive model
Some model steam locomotives’ front trucks are touchier than others. If you’re having trouble with yours constantly derailing, here are some trouble spots to check. Model Railroader staff photo

Q: I have two HO scale steam engines that both have the same problem. Their front trucks are always derailing. They are very light. Do you have any ideas how to fix this? – Ted Zieger

A: Your locomotives’ front trucks should want to stay on the track of their own accords. If they’re derailing, there are a number of possible reasons.

The first and most likely is that something is interfering with the trucks’ ability to swing freely to track through curves, turnout frogs, and the like. Perhaps the screw, rivet, or pin the truck pivots on is too tight. Or maybe an obstruction on the frame, pilot, cylinders, or running gear is cramping the front truck’s style. If there’s a spring that’s supposed to put pressure on the truck to hold it to the rails, it might be too strong, causing resistance when the truck is supposed to pivot. Turn it over in a foam locomotive cradle and look for these possibilities.

Another problem could be the wheels. While you’ve got the locomotive wheels-up, make sure the pilot truck is in gauge. Also check the wheels’ flange depth. If the flanges are too deep, the wheels might have trouble with turnout frogs, guard rails, grade crossings, diamond crossings, and wayward spike heads. Older locomotives tend to have deeper flanges that might not play well with modern, low-profile track and turnouts.

It’s also possible that the problem isn’t the locomotives, but the track. If the derailments consistently happen at the same places on your layout, you might have an out-of-gauge turnout, a shallow frog flangeway, a kinked rail joint, an obstructing power feeder, ballast in the flangeway, or something of the sort. Or maybe a flextrack curve is tighter than it’s supposed to be. If it’s a subtle problem, your steam locomotives’ light front trucks might be the only wheels on your fleet sensitive enough to pick up on it.

Good luck finding your problem.

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