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Passenger & Caboose LED Lighting Circuit

One my 4th conversion using this circuit, I have a problem that did not occur on the last 3 builds. Using R1=100 Ohms, I put this circuit into a Rail King dining car and with power ON I get these symptoms:

1. LEDs much brighter than previous conversions;

2. Hearing a hum when the car is stationery and moving.

 

The only differences are that I separated the circuit components by locating the inductor and the bridge rectifier under the floor of the diner, and the capacitor is in the kitchen. The regulator is under the roof of the car. The LED strip is separated into two parts, one segment with 3 LEDs to illuminate the kitchen, and one segment with 9 LEDs in the dinning section. The LED strip segments are connected in series. I have double checked to assure all of the connections have the right polarity, and continuity is good.

 

Which of the circuit components can cause the above symptoms?

 

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  • Passenger & Caboose LED Lighting Circuit
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Originally Posted by Bobby Ogage:
I get these symptoms:

1. LEDs much brighter than previous conversions;

2. Hearing a hum when the car is stationery and moving.

If "much brighter" then your regulator is not regulating.  Double check that your LED strip(s) are indeed connected to the ADJ pin of the LM317 and not to the OUT pin. 

 

Measure the voltage across R1.  If in regulation you should measure about 1.25 Volts DC.

 

Is the hum coming from the car?  If so, where?

The humming was caused by my test track which still has a black coating on the 3rd rail. On my layout, the humming does not occur. However the brightness of the LEDs is too much, so I am thinking about changing the value of R1.

 

R1 is currently 100 ohms. I tried 270 ohms, but the LEDs are still too bright, and they look brighter than with R1 = 100 ohms.

 

Could it be the that the regulator has a lower current output with less resistance? I am going to try 68 ohms just to see what the difference is.

Last edited by Bobby Ogage

I found my mistake. In my endeavor to make the volume of the assembled components as small as possible, I accidentally wired the LED strip to the output of the regulator bypassing R1. Yesterday I fixed the cars with bright lights and all is well.

 

I discovered my mistake by changing R1, and it made no difference.

 

Here some pictures of my best efforts to date:

 

 

 

DSCN1308

DSCN1310

My soldering skills are improving, but my eyesight isn't!

DSCN1311

This a Rail King 54-foot combine converted to LED lighting with the above circuit package.

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  • DSCN1308
  • DSCN1310
  • DSCN1311
Last edited by Bobby Ogage

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OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Suite 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

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