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Hey everyone! I came across this thread while trouble shooting some MTH light issues and the thoughts of moving my locos to LED. I have all MTH, PS2 locos. For quite some time now, I've been making my own replacement bulbs using 6v grain of wheat bulbs and crimping my own molex connectors. All has worked fine so far. I got curious about swapping things to 3mm LEDs so I went to confirm voltage outputs on my locos. So, here's where I got confused and I'm hoping you all can help. So, you guys know that on MTH locos with ditch lights, there's a contact board with the +/- plates that contacts the springs on the loco's body shell. When I put my voltmeter across that to check ditch light voltage, I'm getting 22v DC!? Is that right?? I checked other DC sources such as LED strip lights and power adapters where I KNOW the voltage and all checks out. The 6v GOW lights work but how could they on 22v DC without burning out instantly?? Something doesn't seem right. Am I doing something wrong? Is the voltmeter not reading something correctly??

Any help on this would be greatly appreciated.

Thank you!

TrainmanJohnson posted:

... I'm getting 22v DC!? Is that right?? I checked other DC sources such as LED strip lights and power adapters where I KNOW the voltage and all checks out. The 6v GOW lights work but how could they on 22v DC without burning out instantly?? Something doesn't seem right. Am I doing something wrong? Is the voltmeter not reading something correctly??

Don't throw out the baby with the bathwater.  It is/was perfectly reasonable to use a voltmeter in this situation.  It's just that there are very few instruments (certainly none for a hobbyist budget) that have a setting or mode that measures the type of voltage signal in a PS2 lighting circuit.  It is possible to interpret the readings and make them useful for trouble-shooting and making modifications but the short of it is that previous explanations meet with glazed-over eyes!
 
Hence, just do what GRJ says and you'll be fine.  As pointed out earlier, mind the polarity of the LED.  In that regard, even if the DC meter indicates confusing values, the sign (+ or -) should be correct.

Depending what you connected to and what other lights driven from that contact pad (Markers) you could have measured Positive Voltage against PCB Ground.  That would have given you 22VDC if track was at 18VAC.  Measurement for actual light out put should have been lower, unless you have a shorted fet.  In which case that 220 ohm resistor will not work as you will have 22VDC on the light output.  G

Trainmanjohnson, was that 22V DC measurement made when there was a bulb attached?  And was this a PS2 5V board (with 9V type battery)? 

As I recall, those board have capacitors on the lighting outputs so if the measurements were made with NO bulb attached the DC voltage might show the peak voltage on a typical digital meter.

Awesome.. Thank you guys!! I did want to tell you that I wrapped a gow bulb around my + & - meter probes and tested. With the bulb on the probes and lit, the meter is showing about 1.97vdc. Without the bulbs, 22vdc. Thanks again for all your input! The led conversion shouldn't be a problem. I got even more curious about figuring voltages on these locos.

Yup, that's about what I'd expect if a bulb is attached.  My prediction for when the bulb is in place is 22V x (6*6) / (22*22) = 1.64V DC which is close enough to your 1.97V DC.  

The eyes glaze over when discussing exactly what's going on with pulse modulated DC, true-RMS voltages, and how the typical hobby-grade meter responds so I'll just leave it at that.   

 

Marty Fitzhenry posted:

John, from the start of the post I have had many people wanting to buy some done up.  The directions are easy to follow.

I'm not really getting the difficulty either, a resistor and an LED, it doesn't get a lot easier than that.  All of this measuring and guessing is pointless if the existing 6V bulbs work!  Obviously, the headlight circuit is working...

I've done a bunch of them, and I have a few sitting behind me that get the treatment.  Whenever I run my PS/2 stuff at the club with the LED's, I get a bunch of requests to fix more of them.

Hey GRJ! It doesn't really have anything to do with the difficulty... It's a very simple thing. I personally like to know the "why" behind things. If I'm told to us a certain resistor, I like to know why. So measuring voltages and such it's just figuring out the whole picture. So, it's not really pointless. It's just learning more of how it all works....A better understanding.

Thank you for all your advice!

I use the warm white in steam, and if it's old enough, I actually use amber or yellow for stuff like the 4-4-0 steamers.  I even use the warm white in many early diesels, the later stuff I ask what the customer would like to see.

I tried yellow strips in some heavyweight passenger cars, and they look cool as beans, so I'm going to do that from now on for my heavyweights.  The different colors really do make a difference in the look.

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