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I had my William's Tmcc converted F7's running.One of my box car's derailed and sparked for about 2 feet before my ciruit breaker popped.I was running it using my Post War ZW.It has Tv's incorporated at the ZW post's as well as one 10 amp exterior circuit breaker attached to the A post that the train run on.No damage was done other than to the track.My question is do I need a ciruit breaker that would trip quicker or am I ok?----------Op's I ment TVS's and not Zender diodes.

 

Thanks

Bryan 

Last edited by BryanM
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a few months back, worked on a ZW for a buddy and

the original breaker was bad, so replaced it with one from

Radio Shack (cant remember the part number).

but to test it, hooked it up and ran a screw driver across

the two rails and SNAP the Radio Shack breaker went almost

before I had a chance to make contact, it was instant.

I experimented with various combos of circuit breakers until I found a good mix that shuts it down quickly but doesn't trip unnecessarily. For each of my two main circuits powered by my ZW, I have TVS on the terminals, marine 5amp breakers and 4 amp PTCs that trip at about 6.7amps. Redundancy is what I wanted, but generally, the marine breakers trip first (lower trip voltage). All depends on the loads you run at. I started with 10 amp breakers and then went to 7. I was concerned for my circuit boards by the delay in tripping those breakers. The PTCs don't trip fast ordinarily, but will if you run consists near their max. 

 

Roger

Does anyone know if there is a quick blow resettable breaker.  I know quick blow fuses are the best but I'd rather not have to replace fuses.  I have TVS on the ZW outputs and around a few places on the layout.  I also use TPCs on the ZWs.   But it is still not clear to me that this a good solution.  I guess I am just wondering if there is a quick blow resettable device, preferrably a rocker type on/off.

 

Thanks,

Ed

Originally Posted by BryanM:

I had my William's Tmcc converted F7's running.One of my box car's derailed and sparked for about 2 feet before my ciruit breaker popped.I was running it using my Post War ZW.It has Tv's incorporated at the ZW post's as well as one 10 amp exterior circuit breaker attached to the A post that the train run on.No damage was done other than to the track.My question is do I need a ciruit breaker that would trip quicker or am I ok?----------Op's I ment TVS's and not Zender diodes.

 

Thanks

Bryan 

Bryan,

 

I would go with a 7 amp breaker unless you need all 10 amps, as 7 is plenty of power for a diesel engine and set of freight cars.

You can buy some good quality breakers from www.mouserelectronics.com for very little money. A 7 or 8 amp breaker is plenty of power for most trains.

 

The old postwar ZW has an internal 15 amp breaker across the common side and you can almost weld with it. No individual breakers!

 

Lee Fritz

cjack,

 

Just recently ordered some of those and they arrived in the mailbox yesterday. They sounded like a really nice item for protection, and thought it might be nice to try. I plan on using TVS's also, as others in the forum have suggested.

 

We recently moved and are still in mass chaos, won't have a chance to use them for a while. Anything to watch out for with these? Any tips? Did you hook up any of the aux devices? Is this the only device(s) you have in your track power for protection?

 

 

I know they're thermally operated but they seem to trip pretty quick. Maybe cause I usually run multiple trains at 4-6 amps so they're already near limit. Although I've pulled as much as 8-9 amps without them tripping even though they have a 4 amp rating. I'll have to do a test and actually time how long they take to trip.

Gary,

They aren't tripping because the trip amp for that one is 8. That's the size I use, but I think mine have a lower trip. I started out with 3s, but they would trip just running the consist a couple of loops. So, I'm close to the edge with the 4s, but they only trip for a derail. Plus.....I added those 5 amp Blue Sea breakers and they tend to go first. 

 

Roger

in addition to a good external breaker on each power district/throttle feed I agree with the suggestion for connecting a TVS  [Transient Voltage Supressor]. Your breaker will trip for current surges however a TVS will clamp the circuit board threatened voltage spikes which do not trip breakers. Connected right on the Hot binding posts, A.D, etc on your pw ZW. See fuzzy photo of  $.45 TVS on a ZW "A"/"U" posts..... 

IMG_1762

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Last edited by Dewey Trogdon
Originally Posted by rtr12:

cjack,

 

Just recently ordered some of those and they arrived in the mailbox yesterday. They sounded like a really nice item for protection, and thought it might be nice to try. I plan on using TVS's also, as others in the forum have suggested.

 

We recently moved and are still in mass chaos, won't have a chance to use them for a while. Anything to watch out for with these? Any tips? Did you hook up any of the aux devices? Is this the only device(s) you have in your track power for protection?

 

 

 

Superwarp1 posted a video of the PSX AC he has on his layout. You can watch the video here.

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