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Suzie

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Posts posted by Suzie

  1. Oh, how to wire these switches. It is quite easy, link the two centre contacts, then connect the two Yellow wires to the outer terminals which are linked when the switch is in the middle position.

     

    Every time the switch passes through the middle position the signal will move, and the position that the switch ends up should correspond with the signal position.

     

    If you need to resync just move the switch to the middle position and back again.

     

    As is always the case with these Dapol signals the solution is never completely ideal, but that is squarely the fault of Dapol.

  2. 19 hours ago, Izzy said:


    I would disagree. Yes, DCC might be popular at present, but many still use ‘simple’ DC and power routing is an easy and logical way of working such a layout without masses of section switches.

     

    I am just going by experience. Most modellers who use analogue DC tend to consider a layout longer than 3' excessive, and having any motive power more than one steam tank loco on a layout beyond the pail. There are of course exceptions...

    • Funny 1
  3.  

    6 minutes ago, BernardTPM said:

    So out of the box - no?

     

    Correct. Power routing is one of those things that was used in the olden days when analogue control was used on layouts with more than one loco. It is a niche requirement nowadays.

  4.  

    17 minutes ago, BernardTPM said:

    Self-isolating?  i.e. only powers the route it is set for.

     

    Yes

     

    8 hours ago, Suzie said:
    • It can be rewired to use the switch rails to power route as Insulfrog.
  5. I think that the Unifrog can be used in any way you like.

    • It can be used out of the box as dead frog.
    • It can be rewired to use the switch rails to power route as Insulfrog.
    • It can be rewired as Electrofrog.
    • Or it can be used as intended as live frog just by adding a frog switch.

    If you have a problem, then one of the above solutions will cure it. There is nothing you can do with the old Insulfrog and Electrofrog that you can't do with a Unifrog, but there are some things you can do with Unifrog that would take a lot of surgery on an Insulfrog or Electrofrog.

     

    I just don't see any unsurmountable problem.

    • Like 3
    • Agree 1
  6. It probably does not like the shorting on the Insulfrogs. When you lay the Insulfrogs, link the frog rails and wire them as Electrofrogs, that way you will eliminate the shorting and things should be better. It is much easier to do this when laying the track.

  7. 8 hours ago, nswgr1855 said:

    ...It continues the design fault (for DCC) of the insulfrog design as you get momentary short circuit conditions when using wide tread 00 wheels and live wired  turnouts from both ends...

    The treads would have to be pretty wide to be a problem, the sort of wheels which would be unsuitable for code 100 track.

    • Agree 1
  8. Wikipedia has a good page for this:-

     

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_railway_signalling

     

    But to answer your specific points two reds will be found on an absolute signal protecting a junction and means stop and do not pass, whereas a single red may be permissive depending on the specific signal type such as a block signal. The purple is equivalent to two reds and is used in a similar way to the way a ground signal would be used here to protect the exit from a yard (purple equivalent to two horizontal reds, white equivalent to two inclined whites).

    • Thanks 1
  9. Patrick, I think it might be easier to do it this way. It sort of depends on how small your opto-isolator is compared to a couple of 1N4148 diodes.

    239316624_redlights2.png.a079b5b8fac3f3099a8f8f5bd6fe6f20.png

     

    Activating the green wire will turn off the rear lights, and using separate resistors will allow red lights at both ends for when you are parked (if this is a feature of your loco, and available on your decoder). Circuit will draw 12mA or thereabouts per LED whether turned on or not, but that probably will not eat too much in to the power budget.

    If using a single resistor as in the original diagram you don't even need the diodes with most decoders.

  10. I think that early experience with the 40s should have inspired a project to produce some single cab 40s that would be used in pairs where more than 2000 HP was required. It might have inspired a HST type arrangement made from a pair of these 40s and a rake of Mk1s in the 1950s. Now that would have left its mark given how long Mk1s and 40s remained in service, probably only being displaced on the Highland main line with the cascading of the more modern HSTs.

     

    I guess they would have had a 1C0-C0 wheel arrangement being a bit shorter without the cab and nose at the back.

    • Like 2
    • Interesting/Thought-provoking 1
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