steve parberry
G Scale Trains
Top tip put a few drops of smoke fluid on the cleaning wheels before use stops all the bouncing and helps it clean much better

Try it and see



Try it and see


beavercreek said:I find that mine works ok on track that is semi dirty but finds it hard to clean track that has been neglected for a few months.
The front cleaning section does 'hop' and bounce a bit. I have rewired it so the cleaning wheels rotate in the same direction as the motor wheels but this has not got rid of the hoping and bobbing action. The rail has what could be described as a dash dash dash....cleaned surface . So many passes have to be made to completely clean the rail surface.
And yes I have tried new cleaning wheels as well a weighting down the front in an attempt to stop the uncontrollable 'bobbing'.
Having said this, it is quicker than going around and doing it all by hand....as long as I do not leave the rails for many months
bunnyrabbit03 said:But does the cleaning motor not have to run in the opposite direction to the drive motor for the loco to clean properly? Mine does not bounce at all and also leaves no 'zebra stripes' on the rails. Maybe I am just lucky![]()
bunnyrabbit03 said:But does the cleaning motor not have to run in the opposite direction to the drive motor for the loco to clean properly? Mine does not bounce at all and also leaves no 'zebra stripes' on the rails. Maybe I am just lucky![]()
TerryTerrySoham said:Am I the only one that finds the LGB rail cleaning loco is poorly designed? In fact I am totally dissatisfied with it - it suffers from excessive vibration causing it to derail (so it has to be watched all the time rather than left to do the job) and it only cleans the rails in patches so that, even after many cicuits of my layout, uncleaned areas remain.
I believe the this design suffers from " Emporer's new clothes" syndrome - everyone extols it's virtues even though it doesn't do the intended job.