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There's always the brute force way for PS/2.   Truthfully, I believe that could be accomplished by using some common anode three-wire RED/GREEN LED's and two 330 ohm resistors.  Wire the anode (center lead) to PV and the negative leads to the forward and reverse light circuit.

I haven't looked that closely at the PS/3 yet, I'd have to think about that one.

I looked at the PS/3 board LED outputs, and it shouldn't be an issue to do the same thing with them, however you need common cathode 3-terminal LED's.  The common cathode goes to PCB Ground and the anodes go through a 100 ohm resistor to the front and rear headlight outputs.  The reason for the resistors is to prevent the bi-color LED's from starving the higher operating voltage headlights and not allowing them to function.

Some TAS/TMCC/EOB from long ago.  Bidirectional/Bipolar LED's  Used the smoke output, programmed different.

I had done some similar wiring for Atlas models wired to track power, the resistor values, (560 pictured), approached 900 to 1000 ohms, if the foggy head remembers correctly. EOB upgrades didn't have a lot of plug-in options for fancy lights. IMO.   Change of color done with reversed polarity, change of direction.

 

 

 

Last edited by Mike CT

I found the package, I actually bought them at unique-leds.com, so much for that source.

I've actually had fine luck with the eBay LED's, I haven't seen any issues with them. 

Mike CT posted:

Some TAS/TMCC/EOB from long ago.  Bidirectional/Bipolar LED's  Used the smoke output, programmed different.

Mike, if you program the smoke LED for cab light, AUX1-6, it reverse polarity on direction changes.  Obviously, if you have smoke, that option is not available, then I use my method with 3-lead LED's.

GGG posted:

PS-2 and PS-3 would be different method since one operated 6V bulbs for Lights and a separate circuit for Markers.  PS-3 is all LEDs.  MTH does this with flash coding and a secondary PCB to do bi-directional on GG-1s.  G

For directional markers on PS/2, I'd just wire to the headlight circuit as I've previously stated.  For PS/3, unless you have the directional marker code native, you can do essentially the same thing.

Here's my comment about PS/2 directional markers.  I don't see any reason this wouldn't solve the directional marker problem without any special code or PCB.

I believe that could be accomplished by using some common anode three-wire RED/GREEN LED's and two 330 ohm resistors.  Wire the anode (center lead) to PV and the negative leads to the forward and reverse light circuit.

As for PS/3, a similar technique would appear to work just using the headlight circuit as well.

For PS/3 you need common cathode 3-terminal LED's.  The common cathode goes to PCB Ground and the anodes go through a 100 ohm resistor to the front and rear headlight outputs.  The reason for the resistors is to prevent the bi-color LED's from starving the higher operating voltage headlights and not allowing them to function.

I'm all ears if you think there's some flaw in this logic.   Previously, you stated that the PS/3 could drive multiple LED's on a single light output.

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