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I have a couple of the very early PS2 engines with dead electronics in them.  I am going to gut the electronics and replace them with a bridge rectifier for forward-only operation.  I want to keep the lights.  What is the voltage rating of the lights?  I have 5v and 12v voltage regulators rated at 1 amp from Radio Shack that I can use for the lights.  Will a heat sink be required on the voltage regulators?

Are there any other features of the engines that I can recover besides the motors and lights using the bridge rectifier?

I don't have the MTH part numbers for the engines, but one of the engines is the Railking SW1500 Union Pacific cab #1183 and the other engine is the Railking 2-8-0 cab #7609 from the all-metal RTR set.

Thank you...

Earl Staley

 

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I made the mistake at looking at the bridge rectifier output on a scope.  It wasn't as pretty as your diagram and it got even messier when I hooked the rectifier up to the train motor. 

The output of the voltage regulator looked like a half wave rectifier output.  The width of the 5 volt pulses just got wider when I cranked up the voltage on the input transformer.  I was expecting to see a straight line at 5v from the regulator.

My input transformer was a CW-80 which probably skewed the results.

Earl

Last edited by EIS

You'll probably need a small resistor in front of the capacitor to isolate it from the motor draw, try a 22 ohm to start.  If you have an old smoke resistor around, that would work.

As for the ugly waveforms, you're just seeing the artifact of no load or the uneven load of the motor. The 'scope will display strange stuff with no load as there's very high impedance and coupling of the stray AC distorts things.

Here's my test, input AC signal from transformer, no load output, and output with a 330 ohm resistor.

Bridge Input Signal

Bridge Output no load

Bridge Output 330 ohm load

Attachments

Images (3)
  • Bridge Input Signal
  • Bridge Output 330 ohm load
  • Bridge Output no load

Yes, it is a kit, but pretty cheap. These scope pictures around here keep stirring my interest. I saw one somewhere that somehow connected to a PC for the screen and it seemed reasonable at the time as well, maybe $50-$60 or so, but I can't remember where I saw it? If you find the one you saw, please post a link.

However, if any smoke release is required as part of the 'learning experience' I'd much rather release it from the kit $18 than from the PC.  

 

If it were my money, I'd go a little more and look for something more capable.

For instance, eBay 301802695998 for $150 shipped.  It's used, but it'll run rings around anything presented here.  This is just one of a ton of options.  I'd certainly want something that was a bit less limited than the 'scope kit.  IMO, that's just slightly above a toy.  Obviously, if you don't really need a 'scope, it might be all you want.  I see 20mhz capable USB models that interface to a PC or laptop in the $50-60 range, that would be the very low end of what I'd recommend.

54600B

Attachments

Images (1)
  • 54600B

John,

The train max speed seems to be reduced to about 1/3 of it's original speed.  I suspect the chassis ground on the voltage regulator may be the problem.  Should I have used an insulating washer to insulate the voltage regulator from the mounting screw?

Additionally the motor was pretty hot after about 30 minutes of running.  I would not have noted the hot motor, except that I removed the shell to add the capacitor.  So maybe the hot motor is normal. 

 

Here is the parts list:

Capacitor: 470uf, 35v electrolytic

Voltage Regulator 5 VDC, 1 amp Radio Shack P/N 276-1770

Full Wave Bridge Rectifier 50 volts, 4 amps Radio Shack P/N 276-1146

 

Here is what I have installed:

RailKing 2-8-0

Thank you for your help...

Earl

Attachments

Images (1)
  • RailKing 2-8-0

I added the insulating washer.  The mica was already in place from one of the DCS components (3.3v regulator).  I checked for continuity between the regulator and the screw and it is open.  The engine now runs at a more normal speed, although I don't think it is still as fast as it ran with DCS.  It will not derail at full speed on 042 curves using a KW at full power but the speed is close to derailment.  Regardless, the speed is fine for me.

BTW, I use an Owon 7102V digital scope and it works fine for a novice hobbyist like myself.

Thanks for your help...

Earl

I will have to check out your Owon scope, thanks for the tip. You obviously know how to hook it up at least, not sure I am that far along yet so I am below novice level. I will also check the links RJR posted. The one GRJ posted looks very nice, but I will probably start with something with a few less knobs.  I bet that thing contains a lot of smoke too, and probably needs it all to operate properly.  

I have seen ones like GRJ mentioned in the $50-$60 range that connect to a PC, that is what got me wondering about them. Then these screen shots keep appearing...  The $18 kit version was appealing because of price and my lack of knowledge, but I can solder up a kit. What to do with it (and how to do it) after assembly is the question...

Earl, your digital 'scope is very similar to the one I have, and certainly sufficient for anything you're likely to encounter.  You are obviously not the guy I was targeting with my 'scope purchasing advice since you have a nice one already.

RTR12, as far as posting graphics, my 'scope writes the screen shots to a USB stick, makes it much easier to post them.   If you want a decent model, something with the capabilities of the one Earl and I have start around $250.  For that you get 100mhz bandwidth, 1ghz sampling, and the ability to write the output to FLASH, as well as a serial or USB connection for computer control of the instrument.

Last edited by gunrunnerjohn

I looked at the Owon, even found a couple of videos on it. It's a bit more expensive that I was wanting to spend, but it looked like a really nice scope unit. Lots of neat features. I have one more video on it to watch today. Maybe I need to read a book about all this before I get to far in to it. Or would that be to get farther in to it? I honestly don't know anything about these things, other than they do neat stuff.

GRJ, which one do you have? I will look for more videos.

Last edited by rtr12

I will look around on ebay, but with my luck if I get one there it probably won't work right and by the time I figure it out it will be too late to return it.  

They are still out there for those prices, but maybe a lot fancier now? While poking around last night I saw some used ones for some very impressive (think HIGH) prices!!! Didn't bother to note what they were, but they certainly were expensive! Now if I could find one that also toasted my morning bagel...

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