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I have a set of 9 of these lionel plastic passenger cars.

https://image.invaluable.com/h...5729251_original.jpg

They are simple and fairly cheap, but I've painted and numbered them all to match the liveries of my ABA F-units and they look fantastic. The only problem I have with them now, is the constant flickering of the lights.

To get the obvious out of the way:

- My track is clean. I've tested this many times on segments of track that have just been cleaned. The flicker is slightly reduced, but is still an issue.

-The wheels and pickup rollers are also clean. I recently cleaned the wheels on all of my rolling stock, including these passenger cars.



So my question is: Can I add something to the cars to prevent the flicker? Obviously a second pickup roller on the blank truck would be one possible solution, but 3 of the 9 cars actually have a 2nd roller already, and they still flicker (just not nearly as bad).

I've seen reference online to terms such as "always on lights" or "keep alive lights", but I don't know exactly what they entail, how costly it is, or if there is a simpler solution for an O-Gauge layout running DCS. 

Would some kind of capacitor work? How about a tiny rechargeable battery?

Any input would be appreciated! 😁

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With traditional lamps capacitors don't generally solve this problem because they have to be quite large, hence expensive, in order to impact flickering significantly.

As Bill has pointed out LED lamps are a typical solution, but they will still flicker unless you employ a special LED driver circuit for each car.  If this circuit is designed correctly then there will be no flicker.

For one example check out @gunrunnerjohn's LED driver, from forum sponsor Henning's.  It works quite well.

Mike

With roller-driven lighting, you will ALWAYS get some type of flickering unless you have capacitors to fill in the miniscule power gaps. Modern LED lighting systems do a few things that make them better overall:

  • The lighting is constant, switching on as soon as there's track power.
  • Most of the LED circuits contain capacitors to stabilize the voltage to the LEDs.
  • They draw less current than light bulbs.
  • They run cooler than light bulbs so there's no risk of warping/melting the passenger car body.
  • They last a VERY long time. Estimates vary from 10-20 years depending on usage.


The other alternative is using batteries. I had a schematic somewhere on doing this but I'd have to search for it. This is how car lighting was done in "the old days" and there are a couple of positives to this option:

  • The lights stay on while the train is stopped. The down side is they'll be on if there's a short, but since the cars are isolated they won't be impacted.
  • They draw no track power.
  • It's not really that hard to do. Your battery pack goes in the baggage car and you install jumper plugs between cars to light them up. You can rig the baggage car to charge the batteries with a little more work.


Hope this helps some.

I appreciate everyone's responses!

It seems like the consensus is to change to LED lights, which can then allow me to add a capacitor if I wanted. I have no doubt this is the best solution, but it is also likely the most expensive, haha. Regardless, it is something to consider and I might end up doing it, despite the cost.

In the short term, I suppose the option of adding a 2nd pickup roller to the cars that only have 1 would greatly help with the flickering. I see that the roller assembly is a separate part entirely, which would make installing new ones very simple. (Lionel part 9050-150)

Now I just have to find a way to get 6 of these up here in Canada without breaking the bank.

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@VonFrank posted:

I have a set of 9 of these lionel plastic passenger cars.

https://image.invaluable.com/h...5729251_original.jpg

They are simple and fairly cheap, but I've painted and numbered them all to match the liveries of my ABA F-units and they look fantastic. The only problem I have with them now, is the constant flickering of the lights.

To get the obvious out of the way:

- My track is clean. I've tested this many times on segments of track that have just been cleaned. The flicker is slightly reduced, but is still an issue.

-The wheels and pickup rollers are also clean. I recently cleaned the wheels on all of my rolling stock, including these passenger cars.



So my question is: Can I add something to the cars to prevent the flicker? Obviously a second pickup roller on the blank truck would be one possible solution, but 3 of the 9 cars actually have a 2nd roller already, and they still flicker (just not nearly as bad).

I've seen reference online to terms such as "always on lights" or "keep alive lights", but I don't know exactly what they entail, how costly it is, or if there is a simpler solution for an O-Gauge layout running DCS.

Would some kind of capacitor work? How about a tiny rechargeable battery?

Any input would be appreciated! 😁

The real issue is Lionel used a crap pickup roller that by design causes the lights to flicker. See if you can find a modern version with real spring pressure and I bet the issue goes away.

@VonFrank posted:
So my question is: Can I add something to the cars to prevent the flicker?

One other not-too-difficult-or-expensive option: for about a dollar each, you could add a cheap AC-to-DC converter board, which has a pretty big smoothing capacitor that would pretty much smooth out most of the flickers from intermittent track contact. To *really* close the loop and totally eliminate the flicker, convert the bulb to an LED -- the LED's small draw will lower the demand on the capacitor and keep the light on during longer interruptions.

I suspect you could buy all the bits you'll need in bulk for less than $3 per car. If you're interested, I can look up links to parts I've used for other projects (they should do for this purpose as well). Good luck!

@Steve Tyler posted:

One other not-too-difficult-or-expensive option: for about a dollar each, you could add a cheap AC-to-DC converter board, which has a pretty big smoothing capacitor that would pretty much smooth out most of the flickers from intermittent track contact. To *really* close the loop and totally eliminate the flicker, convert the bulb to an LED -- the LED's small draw will lower the demand on the capacitor and keep the light on during longer interruptions.

I suspect you could buy all the bits you'll need in bulk for less than $3 per car. If you're interested, I can look up links to parts I've used for other projects (they should do for this purpose as well). Good luck!

Actually, if it still has incandescent bulbs, the AC-to-DC converter will do nothing, even with a big cap.

Actually, if it still has incandescent bulbs, the AC-to-DC converter will do nothing, even with a big cap.

I disagree. I used two of those boards on my layout to smooth the previously-intermittent activation contacts, each wired to power both the solenoid of a crossing gate and a sound module -- both installations markedly reduced the "stutter" in both the gate action and the sound output. I can't imagine the draw of an incandescent bub would be markedly more than the solenoid and the sound module and thus be able to discharge the capacitor more quickly. If I get time, I'll experiment with one of the AC to DC boards and a crossing flasher, to see if it makes much difference and post the results.

@Steve Tyler posted:

I disagree. I used two of those boards on my layout to smooth the previously-intermittent activation contacts, each wired to power both the solenoid of a crossing gate and a sound module -- both installations markedly reduced the "stutter" in both the gate action and the sound output. I can't imagine the draw of an incandescent bub would be markedly more than the solenoid and the sound module and thus be able to discharge the capacitor more quickly. If I get time, I'll experiment with one of the AC to DC boards and a crossing flasher, to see if it makes much difference and post the results.

Well, I played around with things this afternoon, and the results were pretty much what I expected:

- First, I checked the size of the on-board smoothing capacitor, and it turned out to be 2,200 microFarads -- as I had remembered, a whopping big capacity.

- For a load, I used one small incandescent bulb in an old Marx crossing flasher, with an E-10 base like the bulbs used in my Marx Santa Fe passenger cars.

- The DC output voltage of the board is adjustable (I had previously set it at 12 VDC), while the AC input was provided by a small Lionel transformer, with throttle set at about half.

- I first simulated the OP's problem by rapidly making intermittent contact between the transformer leads and the terminals on the crossing flasher, and got the expected pattern of significant and easily visible dimming of the bulb with each interruption.

- I then substituted an LED with pre-installed current limiting resistor (designed for accessory AC voltages), and got the same pattern of dimming -- if anything, the dimming and brightening was even more pronounced, since the LED was much quicker to 'warm up' to full brightness when voltage was applied, and quicker to dim when power was removed.

- I then inserted the converter board between the transformer and the incandescent bulb in the flasher, and repeated the process. While there was notable dimming when power was interrupted, the capacitor did extend the time it took the bulb to go completely dark after AC power to the board was interrupted from a small fraction of a second to about half a second, enough to noticeably buffer transient interruptions IMHO.

- I then tried the same thing with the LED, and found the capacitor's buffering to be *much* more effective. While the interruptions of AC power produced noticeable flickering, the LED pretty much stayed lit constantly. I found it took the LED about three seconds to fully discharge the capacitor, smoothly dimming in a linear fashion, as compared to the roughly half-second the incandescent bulb took to go dark.

My conclusion is that inserting an inexpensive small board between each car's track pickup and an OEM-type incandescent bulb would significantly reduce the flicker the OP was experiencing. Further, if the incandescent bulb is also replaced with a track-voltage-capable LED, the problem would be further reduced and IMHO virtually eliminated. As someone else noted, *some* flickering is consistent with the prototypical experience, and IMHO it would not be worth taking further possible measures like adding on-board battery power. YMMV . . .

A single bulb isn't much of a test, I don't know of any passenger car that has a single bulb.

If you're going to the trouble of opening up the cars, I'd suggest you go for the full LED upgrade, there will be no flicker at all, you'll have intensity adjustment, DCS compatibility, and much more even lighting.

Passenger Car LED Lighting Kit

Say what? Granted, I'm in a bit of a backwater in the hobby, running mostly vintage Marx O scale hardware, but *all* of my passenger cars have a single bulb, and I've never seen one with more than one. FWIW, you'd still get some buffering effect with multiple bulbs, and if you added more capacitance across the DC output, you could add enough to the buffering to achieve the desired result, even with more bulbs.

I have no problem with the LED upgrade suggestion, but if anything, I predict that just substituting LEDs would make the problem worse, since IME the brightness of LEDs much more obviously follow the transient interruption of track power, unless they have some sort of on-board buffering, which would essentially be exactly what I suggested. In the alternative, if you can add a big capacitor to a DC supply feeding the LEDs, you could achieve the same buffering effect.

@Steve Tyler posted:

Say what? Granted, I'm in a bit of a backwater in the hobby, running mostly vintage Marx O scale hardware, but *all* of my passenger cars have a single bulb, and I've never seen one with more than one.

I'm the opposite, I've never seen a passenger car with only one bulb, and I can assure you the OP's car has two bulbs. Many cars have more bulbs, especially the larger cars.  Most MTH 18" cars have five or six bulbs stock.  I confess, I haven't worked on a Marx passenger car...

@Steve Tyler posted:

I have no problem with the LED upgrade suggestion, but if anything, I predict that just substituting LEDs would make the problem worse, since IME the brightness of LEDs much more obviously follow the transient interruption of track power, unless they have some sort of on-board buffering, which would essentially be exactly what I suggested. In the alternative, if you can add a big capacitor to a DC supply feeding the LEDs, you could achieve the same buffering effect.

You obviously didn't follow the link.  My LED driver has been used in at least several thousand passenger car upgrades, and nobody complains about LED flicker coming from a while strip of LED's.  I've personally upgraded at least fifty of my own passenger cars and several hundred customer's cars.

You miss a very important point with LED's.  I light an 18" passenger car with 21 or 24 individual LED's, but the whole string draws around 20-25ma for a nicely lighted car.  The lighting is FAR more even than one or two bulbs as well.  And no, they don't flicker at all.

I'm the opposite, I've never seen a passenger car with only one bulb, and I can assure you the OP's car has two bulbs. Many cars have more bulbs, especially the larger cars.  Most MTH 18" cars have five or six bulbs stock.  I confess, I haven't worked on a Marx passenger car...

You obviously didn't follow the link.  My LED driver has been used in at least several thousand passenger car upgrades, and nobody complains about LED flicker coming from a while strip of LED's.  I've personally upgraded at least fifty of my own passenger cars and several hundred customer's cars.

You miss a very important point with LED's.  I light an 18" passenger car with 21 or 24 individual LED's, but the whole string draws around 20-25ma for a nicely lighted car.  The lighting is FAR more even than one or two bulbs as well.  And no, they don't flicker at all.

Fair enough, since I have no personal experience with passenger cars other than Marx. I stand by my comments, though, that even with more bulbs and more draw, using an AC to DC board with an extra capacitor would still reduce the flickering.

FWIW, I had no prior need to follow the link, since I was not intending to comment on your kit. When I did, I found that, per the posted description, your kit *adds capacitance* in exactly the same manner as do the cheap boards I suggested, hence no flicker. However, based on my experiences and experiments, I *guarantee* that any un-buffered LEDs will exhibit *more* flickering than an equivalent incandescent bulb, since they do not have to heat up and cool down like incandescent bulbs (which in effect provides a sort of built-in 'thermal buffering' for incandescent bulbs). And, at less than two bucks apiece for the boards I'm talking about, my DIY solution is a bit more cost effective than the $42 price for each of your recommended LED kits, albeit with fewer bells and whistles. I'm sure your kit is worth it, especially for the longer cars, but if all you really want to do is reduce the flickering, I stand by my suggestions.

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