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Years ago I know I saw a circuit for a D.C. controller. It was made up of a power transistor and a control pot. Seems to have been back about the mid sixtys. The transistor was mounted on a heat sink for cooling. Anyone remember this? I am building a supply to run a trolley and this would be ideal but for the memory failure.

Jay

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trainman129 posted:

 

Seems to have been back about the mid sixtys. The transistor was mounted on a heat sink for cooling. 

Is that a typo?  By mid sixtys you mean 1960's? 

Search eBay for "pwm motor controller" and you'll get thousands of listings suitable for a DC-motor trolley (i.e., just a few Amps of current required) starting at less than $2 (free shipping from Asia).

No direct links to eBay allowed on OGR but here's an image of one that even has a reversing switch.

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You need a source of DC voltage.  But you can get a wall-wart with, say, 12V DC output capable of several Amps for less than $5 (free shipping).

 

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I think you sounded a bit unfamiliar with how to design a transistorized adjustable dc voltage regulator. No mention of parameters, etc. So most of the reply posts would naturally steer you to some finished products that most of us who might have designed lots of regulators in the past have gravitated to out of sheer laziness and cost considerations. Much of what you can find on ebay is cheaper than constructing it your self and quite suitable.

If you want to design your own, Google "transistorized adjustable dc voltage regulator" and you will come up with thousands of examples just as I did in the last post.

trainman129 posted:

...made up of a power transistor and a control pot. Seems to have been back about the mid sixtys...

I built a couple of these in the 70's for a friend on his HO layout, the circuit was in MR or RMC, the parts were available at Radio Shack, I do remember the transistor was in a TO-3 case.  I still have the original magazine, but it is buried around here somewhere.

HERE is a very close circuit to what we were using.

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