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rtr12 posted:

 

I have been fiddling with this stuff for a few years now and am just now starting to get a pretty good supply of parts on hand. It will take a while to build up your supplies. I enjoy the electronics, following GRJ, Stan2004, PLCProf, JGL, and all the other electronics folks around here just as much as I do the trains. There are some very good folks to learn from here! Good luck and have fun.

RTR12

It is the fiddling with the electronics that has brought me back to the hobby after many years away.  There is just something about the combination of smoke, slow speeds and the silly chatter that has awakened a 9 yr old boy that I did not even realize was still inside me.  Combine that with command switchs and I get a giddy wanting to understand out how it works. 

Here;s a couple more Heathkits. The one on the left is a prototyping unit. You can plug in various devices like resistors, caps and DIP type chips. The larger100_0782                         gray unit on the right is a helium-neon laser. What's cool is it can work with the smaller gray box which is a receiver unit. You can plug a microphone into the laser and transmit voice that will be picked up by the receiver. I tried it successfully at a distance of about a mile.    

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I have discovered that the flickering LEDs are very heat sensitive, I have trouble soldering them to the PCB.  I have to try lower heat and see if I can do a whole set without cooking one or more LEDs.  Obviously, whatever circuitry they use to control the flicker is a lot more heat sensitive than a typical LED or even a flashing LED, those seem to survive my soldering abuse just fine.

gunrunnerjohn posted:

I have discovered that the flickering LEDs are very heat sensitive, I have trouble soldering them to the PCB.  I have to try lower heat and see if I can do a whole set without cooking one or more LEDs.  Obviously, whatever circuitry they use to control the flicker is a lot more heat sensitive than a typical LED or even a flashing LED, those seem to survive my soldering abuse just fine.

Woods solder? 63/37 elec cond is about .15 uOhmM and Woods is about .43 uOhmM. Should be fine for LEDs? Eutectic too...

Scroll down for low temperature alloys...

http://alasir.com/reference/solder_alloys/

https://www.amazon.com/Low-Mel...keywords=woods+metal

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