zephyr1934

MOD of 76423, Hogwarts Express with Hogsmead Station

Recommended Posts

I am happy to present my MOD (actually two MODs) to Lego set 76423, Hogwarts Express with Hogsmead Station.

As you likely know, last month Lego released their 91st version of the Hogwarts Express. I think this one is the nicest standard gauge version Lego has released so far. Yeah, that is not saying much, but I think the engine is very well proportioned at 6 wide. That means it feels even smaller scale than the city trains, but if you ignore the fact that it is tiny next to a minifig, it has good proportions and I like how they hid the flanges on the drivers.


I've now made two MODs to the locomotive that retain the general appearance but enhance it in various ways.


The first MOD is simply cosmetic, adding side rods to the locomotive.

i1.jpg

 

I really wanted to also add connecting rods but the locomotive is just so tight at 6 wide that anything to add connecting rods has too much of a trade-off. Either going over 8 wide on such a short engine or adding a few studs between the driver wheels and the cylinders. The latter is definitely doable, but it would be a much larger reworking than what I was aiming for.


The second MOD is more ambitious...

h1c.jpg

... I know, doesn't look much different in pictures, but that's because pictures don't move.

 

 

A Circuit Cubes motor fits nicely in among the drive wheels

h5.jpg

 

And the Bluetooth controller/battery fits within the space of the existing tender

h2.jpg


h3.jpg

 

The power cube easily pops out for access to the power switch and charging port

h4.jpg

 

The spacing works with the stock Circuit Cube wire

h7.jpg

 

I did make one purely mechanical mod to the tender, removing the center axle to facilitate rounding R40 curves while retaining the wheel holder to maintain appearances.

h6.jpg

 

 

Access to full instructions for both MODs can be found here for free

 

Enjoy!

 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Great work on the mods. The siderods alone do wonders for this model. Adding the circuit cube motor is icing on the cake. Well done.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

It runs okay driving just the rear axle and relying on the side rods? 

I had trouble doing that with my 08

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
4 hours ago, ejayb said:

It runs okay driving just the rear axle and relying on the side rods? 

Actually it is driving the front axle, but yes. Note that I only put traction bands on the front axle, so the rear is really just for show. Most if not all of the propulsion is coming from the front axle.

Driving on one axle is probably best for most steam engines, otherwise, on curves (especially R40) the different axles will fight each other due to the non-equal radii of the two rails. In fact I've heard some folks say only use a traction band on a single wheel so that the other slide can slip, but I prefer to have traction on both rails.

Mind you, this is a light train and the circuit cube is a small motor and small battery. So there is a limit to what you can move with it.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
14 hours ago, LEGO Train 12 Volts said:

Side rods and electric motor, two substantial modifications that make this little locomotive a living jewel! :wub_drool:

Great improvement as usual from you! :pir-huzzah2:

Thank you thank you, though I must admit, I think the motorization might outshine the rods in this case and the motorization went almost as if the original set designer had planned for the two necessary open spaces to be where they were.

 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Wasn't sure whether to start a new thread or add to this one, but as it is quite recent I chose the latter.

I got this set #76423 "for my grandson" and we enjoyed making it together.  He wanted it motorised.  I have a Circuits Cube but I thought I'd see if I could use the more conventional Lego Train Motor and Smart Hub.  There's no room for either of these in the loco but the motor fits nicely under the tender and plenty of room for the hub in the first carriage.

53078580642_df81f15e56_w.jpg

The second picture shows the motor under the tender.  This way around the motor is going "backwards" which you have to remember when using the handset - the cable is long enough to have put it the "right" way round.

53079647708_888d454732_w.jpg

The third picture shows the carriage with the hub inside.  Plenty of slack in the cable.  The green thing is "the world's smallest Bluetooth speaker" an i-Star 79268 which is a 4 ohm 2 W speaker smaller than 4 studs square and 3 bricks deep.  It is linked to the tablet with the Powered UP app so the sounds come from the train not the tablet.

53079647628_11bc92625e_w.jpg

With more time I could have made a better job of the tender, like adding a row of dark red tiles under the tender sides to match the 6x8 plate that was removed, but it shows in principle that this approach will work.  The tender needs more weight as there is quite a bit of wheel slip if you start on a bend, but there is no trouble pushing the loco through R40 points and S bends. Short video below:

 

Edited by idlemarvel
typo

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
52 minutes ago, idlemarvel said:

The green thing is "the world's smallest Bluetooth speaker" an i-Star 79268 which is a 4 ohm 2 W speaker smaller than 4 studs square and 3 bricks deep.  It is linked to the tablet with the Powered UP app so the sounds come from the train not the tablet.

That's brilliant in the simplicity

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
On 7/13/2023 at 4:10 PM, zephyr1934 said:

Actually it is driving the front axle, but yes. Note that I only put traction bands on the front axle, so the rear is really just for show. Most if not all of the propulsion is coming from the front axle.

Driving on one axle is probably best for most steam engines, otherwise, on curves (especially R40) the different axles will fight each other due to the non-equal radii of the two rails. In fact I've heard some folks say only use a traction band on a single wheel so that the other slide can slip, but I prefer to have traction on both rails.

Mind you, this is a light train and the circuit cube is a small motor and small battery. So there is a limit to what you can move with it.

Sorry for the late reply!

The reason I asked was because I had trouble with my BR 08 (0-6-0) binding when driving only the rear axle and using side rods.

I had better results driving the middle axle but I ended up driving the front and middle axle.

 

 

This YouTuber managed to fit 88008 motor in there.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Has anybody seen a digital build of the Hogsmeade Station from this set? I'd love to Bricklink the pieces for it and add it as a second destination alongside Kings Cross from 75955.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
1 hour ago, dvw2 said:

Has anybody seen a digital build of the Hogsmeade Station from this set? I'd love to Bricklink the pieces for it and add it as a second destination alongside Kings Cross from 75955.

@dvw2 On this Rebrickable page for the set, scroll down to "sub sets". You'll see the station there. Click on it, and it has an inventory of all the parts used.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    No registered users viewing this page.