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Re: Separating frequency from the railway tracks
Aaron,
You have some reading to do! The standards page: Start with the electrical spec: Then read the packet format: To greatly simplify, DCC is a square wave that has 2 distinct time periods, 58uS and 116uS. If the square wave is 58uS in period, it indicates a '1' and if it is 116uS (or longer) it indicates a '0'. The amplitude of the waveform is typically 12V-18V depending on the scale of railroad, and how much motor voltage you want present on the rails. Because it is a square wave, you can use a simple bridge rectifier to obtain DC power from the track without large capacitors. This is important because there isn't room inside a loco for large capacitors. With this DC power extracted from the rails, you can power your decoder CPU, and let it watch the waveform to determine the bits, and packets. If you are controlling a motor, such as a loco, you would then use this DC power extracted from the rails and use PWM to speed control the loco motor. There are more details, but I hope that description helps get your head around the concept. Bob Scheffler ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ www.pricom.com |
Re: Separating frequency from the railway tracks
Aaron Lau
Dear Bob,
The device you introduce to me is very interesting, but I am looking for something that can show me the waveform from the rails. I have the thought to build the device as part of my project, so was wondering if you know how to separate the frequencies from the rails. The picture I have in mind is something like a 'microfilter (for the telephone line)' where the output will be to a oscillator to view the waveforms. I havn't buy my own set of tracks yet, therefore I would like to know if whether there are standard voltage, current and frequency from the rails, or is it up to individual product in the market. All contributions are welcome Aaron --- In WiringForDCC@..., "Robert Scheffler" <bob@p...> wrote: www.dcctester.com which will read and decode all the packets. You can display thepackets on a built-in LCD, on a PC using Hyper Terminal, or using StefanTrachsler's LocoChecker here: |
Re: Separating frequency from the railway tracks
Aaron,
If you are looking to decode the packets, then try this: www.dcctester.com which will read and decode all the packets. You can display the packets on a built-in LCD, on a PC using Hyper Terminal, or using Stefan Trachsler's LocoChecker here: Hope this helps! Bob Scheffler |
Separating frequency from the railway tracks
Aaron Lau
I am currently doing some research on DCC and would be starting to
build a DCC receiver according to NMRA stardards in due time. At the very moment, I would like to extract the signal waveforms from the tracks. Any ideas how I should go about doing that. Is there a standard voltage, current and frequency from the control station? Aaron |
Re: Thinking switches
hhodina
--- In WiringForDCC@..., "Vollrath, Don" <dvollrath@m...>
wrote: mechanism that selects which rails will be energized is likely to be a puny sliding contact switch or only points of the moving rails. This might be adequate for DC but with DCC a short circuit on switch rails and the power available from a good DCC booster in combination of the relatively poor electrical contact at can cause havoc. Electrical resistance of that contact may limit current such that the booster does not trip off but can cause the sliding contact to get hot enough to melt plastic parts of the turnout. Thank you for your reply.What kind of switches will be best for HO=DCC use?I'm presently using Fleischmann-Profi with motor and ballast.Are switches,which have all rails energized better? Thanks again. |
Re: Thinking switches
Vollrath, Don
DCC requires good solid electrical connections and contacts. The mechanism that selects which rails will be energized is likely to be a puny sliding contact switch or only points of the moving rails. This might be adequate for DC but with DCC a short circuit on switch rails and the power available from a good DCC booster in combination of the relatively poor electrical contact at can cause havoc. Electrical resistance of that contact may limit current such that the booster does not trip off but can cause the sliding contact to get hot enough to melt plastic parts of the turnout.
DonV |
dcc peco scissors crossings
brian sayer
Hi I am new to this group so halo to you all
I have a question concerning the peco scissors crossings and DCC I was told that you could use a reversing unit and not use the peco switch but I was a bit concerned. I phoned peco and was told this was not a very good idea now I am totally confuse how should I wire them as there will be two on my new layout. I will be using a ZTC511 wich I have just purchased but the paper work they sent me did not help is there someone out there who has any experience of this Thank you Brian |
Re: attaching feeder wires to bus
Brian Williams
The solderless quick splice terminals can be found prety cheaply at
All Electronics (www.allelectronics.com)for about a dime a piece. --- In WiringForDCC@..., "Jerry Goodwin" <jerrygoodwin@y...> wrote: thermo-plastic. theI use the one-handed type stripper twice, facing in alternatedirections to isolate a 3/4 - 1 inch section of insulation then use a $5 tofeeder wire tightly around the bus wire, and solder. the15 or so -- do a perfect job. Look for the wire strippers that allow storeswire) and pulls the insulation back about 1/2" to 1" or so. If you in thelike Menard's, Lowe's, etc. If you need more info let me know. middle of a stretch of wire without cutting the wire? |
Re: attaching feeder wires to bus
Jerry Goodwin
Thanks, this is what I was looking for. I really was hoping for a
solution that didn't involve a utility-knife step, but oh well, if that's the way everyone does it then I can deal with it too. I've heard of the solderless connectors that cut through the insulation, too, but I thought they were pretty expensive (like a buck each). Thanks. --- In WiringForDCC@..., "Vollrath, Don" <dvollrath@m...> wrote: cutting it in two? All the fancy wire strippers I've seen are meant to work well only at the end of a wire, particularly with thermo-plastic. I use the one-handed type stripper twice, facing in alternatedirections to isolate a 3/4 - 1 inch section of insulation then use a sharp utility knife to slit the insulation and pull it off. Wrap the track feeder drop wires several turns around the bare bus wire. Then solder. large tip so as to have plenty of instant heat to transfer to the wire wrapped around the bus. (A soldering 'gun' doesn't work well as it has little heat reservoir.) Tin the iron with a little extra solder for good heat transfer. Let it dwell on the joint for 2-3 seconds to heat it up, then touch the wrapped wire with rosin core solder. It should flow right into the joint. There is no need to add so much solder that it drips...But don't do this over your face either. Wear safety glasses and a heavy shirt just in case. that works great for fiddling under the layout.
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Re: attaching feeder wires to bus
wirefordcc
Ah, heck, I might as well put in my two cents.
For stripping wires, I like the fancy stripper that clamps on the wire in two places and spreads the insulation. I admit it doesn't work perfectly, but it works well enough. As far as not dripping solder on yourself, the basic question is why do you have so much solder on a joint that it drips on you? For many people, the reason is that they are applying so much solder to get enough flux on the wire to get the wire to adhere. If you are solid home wiring, that wire has a coating on the wire that makes it hard for solder to adhere. Regular rosin core solder doesn't do a great job cutting through this coating. So people keep applying heat in hopes of getting things to work. I find liquid flux does such a great job, that you see the wire start shining right away. H&N Electronics sells a liquid flux that I am very happy with. YOu can get to them through my webpage at: I suggest the "gel" they sell for soldering to rail. I use the "liquid" for soldering feeders to buses. Just be sure that if you use liquid flux, you do NOT use a rosin core solder. You use solid solder. Using liquid flux is an extra step, but this stuff will impress you. Once you try it, you will be glad to perform the extra step. Now that we have solved the problem of getting solder to adhere, you should find that you drip less of it on the floor - or your face. BTW: Take a tip from the '70's, NEVER wear double-knit polyester pants. THe solder melts right through the stuff and burns your skin. Allan |
Re: How do I unjoin this group??
wirefordcc
Gene,
You're the first person who has wanted to unjoin. As moderator, I'm sure I can delete you. But before you go, are you aware you have a choice of how you get messages including not having them sent to you? I'm a member of several of these groups. I'm with you. I would go nuts if all those groups sent me emails all the time. Some groups, I have myself set not to receive at all. I only get those messages if I sign on. A few groups send me daily digests - which is a compilation of all the days messages in one big message. The Wiring For DCC is the only one I allow to send me individual messages. Go to management on the left side of your screen. Change your preferences or delete yourself. If that doesn't work, let me know and I'll find a way to delete you. Allan |
Re: Peco Code 100 Insulfrog Turnouts and ground throws, Walthers DCC Friendly Cd 83
Vollrath, Don
The issue of power-routing frogs is twofold.
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1) Insulated dead frogs of any kind (steel or plastic) leave dead spots in the track. Some locos will stall on them if wheel pick-up is marginal and you attempt to roll through the switch at slow speed. (Atlas and Peco Insulfrog) Powering the frog will help avoid that problem....But it must be at the correct polarity to avoid short circuits as a loco runs through the switch. Hense power routed frogs. 2) Some track switches have all metal frog points that are not insulated from the adjoining frog and/or point rails. (original Shinohara/Walthers for example). These switches MUST have power routing of the whole frog section as it is much too long to be dead track. They may or may not have a good built-in mechanism to perform polarity corrected power routing right out of the box. (Walthers do, Pilz don't) In either case, these switches require insulated rail joiners (or built-in rail gaps) to isolate the frog rails from other track. The term "Power Routing" also refers to switching the polarity and/or powering the track rails leading away from the switch frog. For DC systems this was a convenient way of removing power from siding track for non-used loco storage. This is not necessarily desired when using DCC. In most cases the built-in method for selecting frog polarity does not form a robust trouble-free electrical connection. With DCC an accidental short ciucuit through the frog or rail points can actually damage the built-in switch. Adding a separate micro-switch to firmly connect the proper polarity can be tricky as it must switch connections when any built-in mechanism is open circuit. DonV -----Original Message-----
From: WiringForDCC@... [mailto:WiringForDCC@...]On Behalf Of sjanis0249 Sent: Monday, October 31, 2005 10:33 AM To: WiringForDCC@... Subject: [WiringForDCC] Peco Code 100 Insulfrog Turnouts and ground throws, Walthers DCC Friendly Cd 83 I have been reading the Wiring for DCC site regarding turnouts and I think I may be overlooking or just not understanding something about power routing, frog power routing and wiring for turnouts in general. |
Peco Code 100 Insulfrog Turnouts and ground throws, Walthers DCC Friendly Cd 83
sjanis0249
I have been reading the Wiring for DCC site regarding turnouts and I
think I may be overlooking or just not understanding something about power routing, frog power routing and wiring for turnouts in general. let me explain my circumstances: I am constructing a new layout (16' x 40') and I am in advanced benchwork phase (L Girder with risers and cleats and 3/4 plywood sub- roadbed). I have laid 100 feet of Atlas code 100 flex track and have another 300 feet in a box I also have about 30 or so PECO Code 100 Insulfrog Turnouts of various sizes, sm med larg, curved etc... Should I use these Peco Turnouts which according to the "wiring turnouts" sections says this type of turnout is DCC Friendly as is. The Peco Insulfrog turnouts also appear to require the least amount of work to wire and use. I don't understand the concept of power routing the frogs of switches, I see on the site it says this Peco turnout does not allowe a power routed frog (presumably because this is not a live frog) What impact will this have for me? Why would I want to power route the frog? What does that allowe me to do that the dead frog doesn't allowe? I plan on using these specific Peco turnouts in a double ended yard and if they are DCC friendly and easy to istall, should I use them, or based on what I have read about the new Walthers DCC Friendly Code 83 turnouts, Should I scrap the Peco and Code 100 and invest in and switch to code 83 DCC Friendly in the yard, since the only track I have laid so far is about 100 feet of main line and I can easily transition to code 83 in the yards. I also don't quite get the advantages of the Walthers Code 83 DCC Friendly turnouts over the PECO Insulfrog code 100 turnouts, with all the extra soldering I would need to do on the underside of the walthers. And I don't understand the concept of power routing the frogs on the walthers, DO I have to power route the Walthers DCC Friendly frogs? My Intention would also to be to use them in the yards and won't my yards be wired anyway? Just in case this has a bearing let me decribe my Loco fleet: My fleet is state of the art, since I have had the luxury of getting rid of all old Locos and over the past two years have purchased 20 or so new Broadway Limited Steam engines and a few of their diesels, all with sound etc and another 10 or so of the latest Atlas and Proto 2000 locos with DCC and sound. These locos don't seem to have problems picking up current from the track, an in my old DC test tracks they make it over the peco frogs with no problems or sparks. And This new layout is going to be DCC as soon as I figure out which radio controlled DCC system I want or need to purchase, I figure I will be in Benchwork, track, and scenery for another 12 months so I am not exactly in a hurry to buy the DCC system any time soon as the technology keeps getting better and the prices seem to be stabilizing and even getting mildly lower, I borrow my brothers digitrax system(2 yr old system) for testing dcc now and then. What am I missing in general or detailed terms about power routing frogs? Don't I just wire the main line to my bus ( I solder the underside of all track to leads attached to a bus and also solder radius rail joiners) and wire the yard on the same bus and if the Peco Turnouts don't need insulated joiners, what is the point of routing power to the sidings? they will already be wired and powered. I Planned on using simple ground throws to operate the yard switches since they will be easily accessed near the edge of the layout and there will be 20 switches in the yard and the thought of wiring up 20 totoises for a single yard gives me heartburn. Any Light that someone can shed for me on the above matters would be greatly appreciated. |
Re: attaching feeder wires to bus
Vollrath, Don
You missed the rather pointed question...
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How do you strip off the insulation on a solid bus wire without cutting it in two? All the fancy wire strippers I've seen are meant to work well only at the end of a wire, particularly with thermo-plastic. I use the one-handed type stripper twice, facing in alternate directions to isolate a 3/4 - 1 inch section of insulation then use a sharp utility knife to slit the insulation and pull it off. Wrap the track feeder drop wires several turns around the bare bus wire. Then solder. The trick of soldering is to use a clean hot iron with a relatively large tip so as to have plenty of instant heat to transfer to the wire wrapped around the bus. (A soldering 'gun' doesn't work well as it has little heat reservoir.) Tin the iron with a little extra solder for good heat transfer. Let it dwell on the joint for 2-3 seconds to heat it up, then touch the wrapped wire with rosin core solder. It should flow right into the joint. There is no need to add so much solder that it drips...But don't do this over your face either. Wear safety glasses and a heavy shirt just in case. I added a slanting upright back rest to an auto mechanics creeper that works great for fiddling under the layout. DonV -----Original Message-----
From: WiringForDCC@... [mailto:WiringForDCC@...]On Behalf Of Ken Sent: Monday, October 31, 2005 7:28 AM To: WiringForDCC@... Subject: [WiringForDCC] Re: attaching feeder wires to bus 1. I use wire strippers to pull the bus wire insulation apart,wrap the feeder wire tightly around the bus wire, and solder. 2. Don't us the old type wire strippers that require you to hold one wire with one hand and pull the insulation away with the wire strippers. Newer strippers that are really not costly at all -- $5 to 15 or so -- do a perfect job. Look for the wire strippers that allow basically one handed operation. You just put the stripper over the wire and squeeze. One side grips the insulation and hold, the other side cuts automatically to the size of the wire (doesn't even nick the wire) and pulls the insulation back about 1/2" to 1" or so. If you need more than that space just reposition and squeeze again. It's soooo simple to do this way. They work perfectly on twisted wires as well. These strippers are available at most hardware and supply stores like Menard's, Lowe's, etc. If you need more info let me know. Ken --- In WiringForDCC@..., "Jerry Goodwin" <jerrygoodwin@y...> wrote:
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Re: attaching feeder wires to bus
mike thurston
I used 8 postition barrier strips centrally located
near groups of feeder wires. bus wire comes to one side of strip which has 14 gauge wire wrapped from one post to the other all the way down on that side and next bus wire leading off either side which allows be to put up to 14 feeders of each one using lugs. I use one strip for each polairity and NO soldering at bus wires involved. Hasn't seemed to detract from the performance at all. But don't go beyond the 30' limit for main bus lines. Biggest hassle here is making sure you have the right feeder wire for the particular side of the bus. I color coded one feeder wire with red nail polish and hooked it up to red bus line. My bus lines are all 14 gauge wire...red and green. It's a tad more expensive but it's a lot easier to undo a screw if you make a mistake than trying to unsolder a bunch of wires looking for the right one. You can also buy terminal joiners for the barrier strips that do the same thing as wrapping all the screws on one side with wire but they cost almost as much as the barrier strip..safety wise i would think barrier strips would be the safest way to do it as you don't have bare hot wires where you can get zapped....just an idea...hope it helps....if you need more detail email me at zekda99@... mt --- Ken <kenkal@...> wrote: --------------------------------- Forgot to answer this part: The trick is to NOT put your face under the solder connection. Or legs. or arms. or fingers. or whatever. Just keep your self off to the side a little bit and your arms near parallel with the connection to be soldered so that if solder does drop, it falls to the floor. Ken --- In WiringForDCC@..., "Jerry Goodwin" <jerrygoodwin@y...> wrote: .> And how do you avoid dripping hot solder on yourface? SPONSORED LINKS Lionel model train European model trains Model railroads Ho scale model train Ho model trains G scale model train --------------------------------- YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS Visit your group "WiringForDCC" on the web. To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: WiringForDCC-unsubscribe@... Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service. --------------------------------- __________________________________________________________ Find your next car at |
Re: attaching feeder wires to bus
Ken
Forgot to answer this part:
The trick is to NOT put your face under the solder connection. Or legs. or arms. or fingers. or whatever. Just keep your self off to the side a little bit and your arms near parallel with the connection to be soldered so that if solder does drop, it falls to the floor. Ken --- In WiringForDCC@..., "Jerry Goodwin" <jerrygoodwin@y...> wrote: .> And how do you avoid dripping hot solder on your face? |
Re: attaching feeder wires to bus
Ken
1. I use wire strippers to pull the bus wire insulation apart,wrap the
feeder wire tightly around the bus wire, and solder. 2. Don't us the old type wire strippers that require you to hold one wire with one hand and pull the insulation away with the wire strippers. Newer strippers that are really not costly at all -- $5 to 15 or so -- do a perfect job. Look for the wire strippers that allow basically one handed operation. You just put the stripper over the wire and squeeze. One side grips the insulation and hold, the other side cuts automatically to the size of the wire (doesn't even nick the wire) and pulls the insulation back about 1/2" to 1" or so. If you need more than that space just reposition and squeeze again. It's soooo simple to do this way. They work perfectly on twisted wires as well. These strippers are available at most hardware and supply stores like Menard's, Lowe's, etc. If you need more info let me know. Ken --- In WiringForDCC@..., "Jerry Goodwin" <jerrygoodwin@y...> wrote:
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Re: attaching feeder wires to bus
JOHN
Hi
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I have used scotchlok blocks a form of insulation displcement connector. No soldering,no stripping just a pair of pliers. You can also get them with a spade receptical such that you can break the connection if you wish. These are available from express models. Have a look on their website....... t.html Regards.....john -----Original Message-----
From: WiringForDCC@... [mailto:WiringForDCC@...]On Behalf Of Jerry Goodwin Sent: 31 October 2005 07:28 To: WiringForDCC@... Subject: [WiringForDCC] attaching feeder wires to bus How do you connect the feeder wire to the bus? If you solder it, how do you strip the insulation from the bus in the middle of a stretch of wire without cutting the wire? And how do you avoid dripping hot solder on your face? ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS a.. Visit your group "WiringForDCC" on the web. b.. To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: WiringForDCC-unsubscribe@... c.. Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- |
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