Office of Steam Forum for Model & Toy Steam Gas & Hot Air Engines
Builds, Repairs, Show Your Machines! => Videos The Office of Steam Cinema => Topic started by: Steamburns on June 28, 2024, 12:15:05 am
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Not just a Jensen #50 whistle modification, but that same set-up will modify the whistle on just about any other Jensen boiler as well.
I've always been sort of curious why Jensen never developed a better whistle, but then again, the standard Jensen whistle always overloads and shuts down the sound recording on my videos, so I must assume that it is actually a very loud whistle at a frequency that I can't quite hear, but my camera can?!?!
They are very high pitched and tend to leak a lot stealing power from the boiler.
Actually, you can generally get Jensen whistles to seal up, just like the steam line throttle valves, by working them back and forth repeatedly, under some moderate hand pressure, until they seat into their cone better. If that doesn't work, you can go to the next more aggressive step by doing the same thing with a little fine lapping compound in the joint.
The other thing I always do before starting up a Jensen, even when I think I've got all the valves well seated, is to put a fraction of a drop of steam oil on those cone seats by forcing the joint open against the spring pressure and placing a toothpick tips worth of steam oil into the joint.
Same with the S/V by the way!
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Bruce did excellent work with those needle valves, glad to own some myself.
Indeed, Bruce is very talented at what he does. The needle valve looks original as if it was never even tampered with.
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Bruce did excellent work with those needle valves, glad to own some myself.
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Not just a Jensen #50 whistle modification, but that same set-up will modify the whistle on just about any other Jensen boiler as well.
I've always been sort of curious why Jensen never developed a better whistle, but then again, the standard Jensen whistle always overloads and shuts down the sound recording on my videos, so I must assume that it is actually a very loud whistle at a frequency that I can't quite hear, but my camera can?!?!
They are very high pitched and tend to leak a lot stealing power from the boiler.
Everything else Jensen makes is top notch except
Their whistles. lol.
Yes, this can be used on any Jensen boiler. Pretty nifty, eh?
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Not just a Jensen #50 whistle modification, but that same set-up will modify the whistle on just about any other Jensen boiler as well.
I've always been sort of curious why Jensen never developed a better whistle, but then again, the standard Jensen whistle always overloads and shuts down the sound recording on my videos, so I must assume that it is actually a very loud whistle at a frequency that I can't quite hear, but my camera can?!?!
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Nice work Travis.
I have a siren you might want to try on it. ;D
A steam siren???
Yes! For outside use only. ???
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Nice work Travis.
I have a siren you might want to try on it. ;D
A steam siren???
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Nice work Travis.
I have a siren you might want to try on it. ;D
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Hey folks, had a little fun tonight. Using a needle valve that has a Jensen 5/16-24 TPI thread on it that SPS made, I found some fittings to fit the other end with NPT pipe threads. From there I welded/ soldered a PMR pipe to it and a fitting to the PMR whistle. Works great!
Best of all, no mods were done to the boiler! It just screws right off the boiler.
SO much better than a Jensen whistle!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uF0Dk31clEA