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cliff park

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Everything posted by cliff park

  1. The instant the switch contact is made there be at least 15V DC at the point terminals. BUT this will be very brief, quickly dropping to virtually zero as the capacitor discharges. In some respects a DMM is not good for measuring such a transient event.
  2. So 1 wire from your CDU will be common to all the points and can run around the whole layout from point to point. The actual route will obviously depend on shape and size of layout but could well go back to the CDU making a kind of ring circuit. The other side of the CDU goes to ALL the centre contacts of the switches, then individual wires to every point (some may be thrown together, so may be commoned). Now all this may seem obvious, but treating it like this may help to visualise the stages/sequence needed. Hefty wiring for the 'common' and the feed to the switches, and keep all runs as short as possible
  3. The output of a CDU can NEVER be AC. It comes from a charged capacitor. (CDU =Capacitor Discharge Unit). If it is being charged from a nominal 16v AC it may well be charged to about 24v , which may be too much for a 12v relay coil. By the way RFS your reference to 30v, 3amp is it's capacity to switch, not the coil
  4. The voltage is relevant, the current not so much. Even a quarter amp supply will work, but it will take longer to charge after a discharge. Even then it's only a matter of seconds.
  5. The funny thing is that the pioneers of photography would have given their eye teeth for the high definition and colour that we take for granted, and then we spend our time trying to make our pictures look like theirs.
  6. There isn't a button to press anywhere is there? To change the mode?
  7. My house is built in what was a low lying meadow. It has a 'raft' style floor. Ie a concrete floor which 'floats' in the damp soil, then 3 feet above that is the timber floor. Supporting the floor joists and the internal, brick walls is a series of walls like op describes. There are also air bricks in the outside walls, which must not be sealed. Amazingly in the '90s somebody changed out the heating system and installed lots of pipes in this void. There are two hatches to gain access. They knocked man sized holes in these walls to gain access to the various areas under the kitchen, hall, dining room etc. So these walls now look like giant Swiss cheeses, but they still hold up some very large walls, and allow (even more) ventilation
  8. Make sure to get centre off switches. A simple SPDT is just a changeover, either A or B, not centre off.
  9. Consider a crossover from, say, one loop to another. You set both controllers to the same speed and drive across. But as it crosses it at some point it will be contacting both controllers, effectively connecting them together, short circuiting them back through the common transformer winding. With separate transformer windings each supply 'floats', even with common return.
  10. Not 'rising butts', these are spiral in nature, and the door rises as it opens
  11. Is it worth thinking about motor theory? The coils of the motor have very low resistance, and if something like 12V was applied straight across a coil it would get very hot. However once it starts turning back emf reduces the current, and I suppose airflow over the spinning armature helps to cool it. If it doesn't turn on 9V, or something close to it, there is something not right. It could be the magnets are no longer strong enough, or there is a mechanical problem. Whatever the cause it means that when 12V is applied the armature is not turning as fast as it should and the above effects don't happen. as they should. and they get hot.
  12. The flap on my railway hinges downwards, sorry no pictures, too cold out there. Very easy, but if you have any structures on the 'flap' they will impinge on the gap you have to walk through, and needs care walking past.
  13. It's not a capacitor, and no. It's a very small inductor and has no effect on the motor.
  14. Surely one of the main points about the asbestos danger is that it is ok if left undisturbed. While the mat, if it is there, is inside the case it is safe. It only becomes a danger once someone opens up the case and starts pulling it about. Walk round any council estate in Britain and you will see hundreds, maybe thousands of garages with asbestos roofs, indeed whole garages made of asbestos. They are still in use, nobody says we should avoid them. I know most councils have long term demolition plans, but there is no big panic. In the scale of things the amount of asbestos in the controllers is tiny and contained.
  15. The best way to avoid burning switches out with arcing is to use a CDU. Virtually no arcing occurs when a switch makes, it is when the switch breaks, especially with an inductive load like a point motor, that the arcing happens. If, however, you use a CDU there will be little or no current flowing at the end, hence no arcing
  16. There are some very tiny coaxes, like on earpieces, they work well, ultra flexible and effectively only one wire to run
  17. Just in case you've not spotted this, 'Middle for Lidl' this week, may be leftover. £15.99, 349 pieces including collets, drills, flap wheels, grinding wheels, slitting discs, mandrels, etc,etc.
  18. Old SCART leads have a range cables inside, usually a metre iong. You can often pick them up at car boot sales for next to nothing
  19. Would it be feasible to do the reverse of what 'Right Away' said and use the road/rail crossing bit of a level crossing as the starting point to scratch build one?
  20. The easiest way to remember the 'it's' or 'its' problem is to think that 'it's' is really short for 'it is', or occasionally 'it has', as in 'it's got three wheels' which is really 'it has got three wheels'. So try substituting 'it is' for 'its' and see if it makes sense.
  21. I worked with a guy who was so fond of apostrophes that I once saw him use it in his own name. Let's say his name was Smithers, he wrote it on a form as Smither's, and looked confused when I pointed it out.
  22. Just in case anyone needs it, there is an organisation called TWAM, Tools With A Mission. They are church based,but the work they do is amazing. They have collection/storage places all over the country. They will take any tool or machinery, be they garden, domestic, DIY, or small industrial , refurbish and test, then ship them out to 3rd world countries by the container load. I am involved with a charity (REMAP) which makes things for disabled people and we have been contacted several times by widows with sheds or garages full of DIY kit and just want rid of it. We take what we need, the rest goes to TWAM.
  23. To increase the sensitivity for infrared paint the underside of the loco, or a patch on a wagon, with red paint. I know, counter-intuitive, but red coloured things only reflect red light. A blue object, for instance, absorbs all colours except blue, which it reflects.
  24. The reason that pillboxes were often found near railway lines was that the Germans were very fond of using the lines to drive tanks along. Bridges, embankments and so on were virtually guaranteed to be strong enough and the right size to take a tank. So railway lines were often defended at strategic points by pill boxes or spigot guns . I live near a long abandoned railway line and there is a spigot gun base about 30' from my front door.
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