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I was running my trains for a few minutes yesterday when the fun came to a stop - the train jumped the track. I got everything back on the rails using the biological bucyrus crane. I applied power and the train was a no-go - short circuit - I missed two trucks. Corrected the situcation, but still a no-go. The circuit breaker on my ZW popped, which surprised me as I have polyfuses that I would have expected to go first. I quadruple check the track and the train - nothing looks like it should be shorted out. I use my block switches to turn off all feeds to the track and bring up the power again on my ZW... still have a short somewhere... I use the other throttle on the transformer - no short. I remove all the leads from the transformer find I still have a short iwth the original throttle!!! So I bust open the thing, remove/rebuild the the affected throttle assembly go through it to find absolutely nothing of concern. Finally, I remove the TVS I have between the binding posts, and the short goes away. Are TVSs sacrificial and when they fail, do they short?

Last edited by bmoran4
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So there is a "TVS" inside the TIU?  Reason I ask if that my channel 1 variable no longer will operate.  A few years ago I think I had a short and that channel no longer worked and I just never did more than open up the TIU and check the fuses (which I believe were all ok).  

But if this is some component I didnt' know to check/replace then maybe I can save that channel myself?  

 

 

My TVSs are rated for 1000W - my postwar ZWs are 250/275W. I've had my fair share of shorts on the track prior to this. Replacing a TVS every so often is not expensive or time intensive - I just had an incorrect idea of their how fragile they are and that they would be something I would want to have replacements on hand for.

A resistor in line means more power is going to the Engines you are trying to protect. Let the TVS die and replace it, It's cheap, engine electronics are not.

 

And Yes, A TVS is like a fuse, expendable to protect more expensive parts.

I design Industrial Products, I use TVS' like popcorn.

One or more on every connection off the board. and then I put Series 1/2Watt wire wound dropping resistors in line into the board inside the TVS.

The contacts are all rated 10VDC.

You can hook up anything up to and including 24VDC to any of my connections and it will just pop your fuse. It will not hurt my product.

Sorry, No, they are not meant for Model Trains. They are Industrial Controls.

Originally Posted by illinoiscentral:

I have always wondered why you can't put a resistor in series with those devices to make them intentionally soft.

Then you are defeating their purpose.  They need to react fast to protect your trains.  They only should fail when you exceed their design limits.  Most spikes caused by derailments or what have you should not blow the Transzorb(unless the one picked in a TIU or by you isn't rated high enough for the environment you attend to use it in).  It's only those really big spikes that should the Tranzorb out.

 

I wouldn't call them fuses either. They are two diodes connected end to end to clamp voltage/current spikes.

 

Last edited by superwarp1
Originally Posted by Russell:

To check for an Open Fail you need a power supply rated higher than the rated voltage of the TVS with a limited current flow.

If current does not flow, it's Failed open. If current flows, the limit will keep you from smoking the TVS.

OPEN is a much lower occurring fail than shorted.

I read that as being silently unprotected in the event of an open failure 

Originally Posted by repair technician:

well if they open up you have NO protection , i would rather one shorts at least it save the channel,where as if it opens you have lost the TVs diodes protection and the channel circuit now can be damaged!

Alan

There is no law that says you can not put multiple TVS units on a circuit. At work sometimes we put 3 or 4 on one circuit if it was troublesome. Early instruments with computers were very sensitive to spikes and engineers then often did not consider the problem in circuit design. Usually they fail open. I imagine you could test the device with a 28VAc transformer which would peak around 39v.Put it in series to a small load. Should clip the top and bottom of the wave and maybe light a bulb. 

 

Dale H

Originally Posted by willygee:

 A new tvs out of the bag would give what for resistance readings and could you pull one leg out of your TIU and compare?

A new TVS looks like an open circuit until you reach it's voltage rating, then it's a short circuit.  The only way to test them is to apply in excess of the rated voltage with some current limiting.  The most common failure mode is shorted, and before the total short, the trigger voltage starts to be reduced, which of course hastens the demise of the TVS.

 

 

 

Originally Posted by RJR:

Russell, before trying that, I would think all output should be removed.

 

Come to think of it, the test could destroy it also.  Correct?????

Yes, Do the test on the TVS all by itself, removed from circuit.

 

Also, destruction in test is why I specified a Current limited power supply.

Set the current limit very low, then apply low voltage.

With Voltage below the threshold of the part, no current should flow, if it does, it's shorted, Replace it.

Then raise the Voltage slightly above the threshold.

If no current flows, the unit is open - Replace it.

If current flows, it's good

Discontinue the test quickly to maintain the part.

 

And as I mentioned before but may have been misunderstood.

TVS devices are cheap, So treat them like a fuse. (but not AS a fuse)

IE, Keep spares and toss out failed ones.

Repair of one Engine will buy hundreds of TVS'

Originally Posted by bmoran4:

I was running my trains for a few minutes yesterday when the fun came to a stop - the train jumped the track. I got everything back on the rails using the biological bucyrus crane. I applied power and the train was a no-go - short circuit - I missed two trucks. Corrected the situcation, but still a no-go. The circuit breaker on my ZW popped, which surprised me as I have polyfuses that I would have expected to go first. I quadruple check the track and the train - nothing looks like it should be shorted out. I use my block switches to turn off all feeds to the track and bring up the power again on my ZW... still have a short somewhere... I use the other throttle on the transformer - no short. I remove all the leads from the transformer find I still have a short iwth the original throttle!!! So I bust open the thing, remove/rebuild the the affected throttle assembly go through it to find absolutely nothing of concern. Finally, I remove the TVS I have between the binding posts, and the short goes away. Are TVSs sacrificial and when they fail, do they short?

I had a K-line F3 where the TV shorted and killed my track power too (not sure of the reason). It was across the motor circuit. I replaced it and it started running again and no problems since that happened a few months ago. In my case Long story "short" 

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