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I am in the process of rebuilding a PW ZW for my own use.  This morning I thought that maybe I should add a wire and terminal directly from the unused high end of the secondary coil to provide a fixed voltage that doesn't need to go through rollers and sliding contacts to get to the outside world - "pseudo-brick" output.  I would include an appropriate rocker-switch circuit breaker to provide both protection and an ON/OFF switch.  I would probably feed this to a TPC so that I can still have conventional variable-voltage control and TMCC emergency shutdown.  Any thoughts?

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Since I typically run dual motor PW F3's with 8-10 PW cars (no fast angle wheels or needle-point bearings) up a steep grade, I use W51-series rocker breakers rated at 10 amps on the track feeds.  (I use similar 5 amp breakers on my accessory feeds.)  Other in-between current values are available, but not commonly stocked.

JGL, when I use the ZW, I set the voltage to about 18 and scroll the DCS remote all the way up.  I happened to have a powerhouse 180 left over from a layout-building project, and replaced a ZW with it, feeding 2 TIU channels that rarely run more than one train at a time.  It's a better power source for me:  I've never seen a breaker work so fast.  I do wish it had a light when the breaker pops.

 

Years ago I altered a Lionel loco so that the e-unit would only work if the track got 20 volts, and to get that I tapped the other end of the secondary and fed it into a SPDT PB switch.  (Loco didn't jump because the relay that activated the e-unit also broke the motor circuit.)  Holding the button down 2 seconds would activate the coil couplers.  Ran fine for years, until DCS came along and I converted it.

Last edited by RJR

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