I have collected traditional hot rods of some sort for most of my life.
But about ten years ago I decided (mid life crisis) it was time for something
different. After a year of hunting want ads and sale bills I bought a 1946
Fairmont Railroad Motorcar on a surplus auction. What did I know about a Railroad Motorcar...? Exactly Nothing!
I got it home, got it running found some abandoned track to try it out on and rode it (actually...pushed it more than I rode it) for a year. It
was clear the motor was tired and needed an overhaul. Compression was about
half of what it was supposed to be and the oil leaks were numerous.
The hunt was on for somebody that knew something about
Fairmont 2-cycle engines. That somebody turned out to be Richard Canaday who
along with his brother Jack ran a machine shop in Lathrop Missouri. Richard had
a motorcar himself and understood all of the principles of how a Fairmont
2-cycle engine was designed to work and more importantly how to improve the
efficiency (read increase horsepower and torque). He understood my logic that
this was an opportunity to squeeze a little more torque and horsepower from
this 2-cycle engine.
The bottom end was rebuilt and left alone with not room for
much improvement there. Like most things designed in the early days it was over built for the job it had to do. With that portion of the engine in good shape it was
time to move forward. The cylinder head was next.
Hardly recognizable, this is the same head with the machine
work done. That center section, was raised, about 5/16 of an inch. Richard knew
exactly what he needed for a finished measurement. Not satisfied with a simple
port and polish job Richard did a complete redesign of the cylinder head
combustion area.
I was like a kid in a candy store having not watched
somebody this good in more than twenty years. Richard is not a theory guy, he is
an “absolute 100 percent know how something works” guy. “You can’t make
something better ‘till you know for certain how it works!.” he often said.
This is the head reinstalled on
the engine with the engine back in the motorcar. The Factory engine had steel
head nuts and steel studs, which were seized to each other so when it is time
to remove the cylinder head, all of the head bolt studs broke off in the block.
Richard made a tool to get the
broken head studs out of the block. He also machined this set of brass head
studs on the lathe as replacements. No more seized head bolts.
The engine would almost pass for
stock except for the head bolts…and until you start it. The original cylinder
compression in a new stock Fairmont engine is 65 pounds. This one was down to 36 pounds. This one
today is just shy of 85 pounds. The exhaust note “Barks” a sharp crack every
time the engine fires, gone is the mellow putt putt sound. These are hand crank start engines so
cranking the engine is now a little more difficult, but well worth the trouble.
This is a stock piston out of a
1946 Fairmont 2-cycle engine. Looking at that dome and the fact that the piston
weighs over a pound presented a few challenges. These engines remained the same design from
their introduction in the early 1920’s up into the mid 1970’s when they were
discontinued.
This is my Fairmont Motorcar
stopped in the Rail Yard in Blue Rapids Kansas, only four miles to go until the
end of the line. This rail line has 12 miles of track and has some great scenery. I also ride this line at night a couple of times a year which is quite the adventure. Night time is when all of the animals are out and about. This railroad line has two
sections of track that are two percent grades about a half a mile long each. My
track speed used to be as slow as five miles an hour by the time I got to the
top of the grade. Now I run 20 mph all the way up and over the hills. Not bad for an engine design that is over 90 years old.
On this rail line is a railroad bridge that is 90 feet about the Big Blue River and is about an 1/8 mile long. As you can see is has no railings and you can look down between the ties as you ride over it. It truly takes your breath away the first couple times you cross over it.
This is the same bridge at sunset. If you ride across this bridge about dusk you can often see the deer walking out onto the sand bars to drink out of the river. There is a lot to see along the railroad tracks that you cannot see from a road or highway...like the antique cars stashed in the back of farmsteads away from public view, or so they thought.
I now have my "something different" hot rod. Never in my wildest dreams did I ever imagine that it would be a railroad motorcar of 1945 vintage, that you could hot rod a 2-cycle engine designed in the 1920"s, and that I would be riding the rails for fun. You never know what life has in store so enjoy every day.
Here is a short video of my 1946 Fairmont Motorcar in action. For comparison, the yellow motorcar that goes by first is a stock motorcar and has the typical putt putt exhaust note that all of the early 2-cycle motorcars are known for. Mine is the one following.
The exhaust note is quite different between the two. This is on the Central Branch Railroad in Waterville Kansas. You can stay in that hotel in the background, it has been restored. The caboose in the background is one of two surviving wooden cabooses left in Kansas. The Central Branch Railroad is now owned by the Marshall County Railroad Historical Society and is the oldest continuously operating Railroad in Kansas.
I now have my "something different" hot rod. Never in my wildest dreams did I ever imagine that it would be a railroad motorcar of 1945 vintage, that you could hot rod a 2-cycle engine designed in the 1920"s, and that I would be riding the rails for fun. You never know what life has in store so enjoy every day.
Here is a short video of my 1946 Fairmont Motorcar in action. For comparison, the yellow motorcar that goes by first is a stock motorcar and has the typical putt putt exhaust note that all of the early 2-cycle motorcars are known for. Mine is the one following.
The exhaust note is quite different between the two. This is on the Central Branch Railroad in Waterville Kansas. You can stay in that hotel in the background, it has been restored. The caboose in the background is one of two surviving wooden cabooses left in Kansas. The Central Branch Railroad is now owned by the Marshall County Railroad Historical Society and is the oldest continuously operating Railroad in Kansas.
Thanks to Ed Hoover for his video services...
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