Bob Nelson
I am a person with a very active inner child. This is why my wife loves me so. Willoughby, Ohio - the home of the CP & E RR. OTTS Founder www.spankybird.shutterfly.com
Hi guys
I have an additonal question for the bell function. I am from Austria and building a new electronics for the broken ZW controller for my vintage collection of Lionel Trains ( some vehicles are over 80 years old!)
I do not have any vehicle with bell funtions, I do not know if they are any from this era. Anyway the whistle is already working fine. On the ZW there are just buttons for the bell, but usually the bell on the train sounds longer. ( I never saw the ZW in operation, I have got as broken unit).
Was this function rather a toggle button? Ie the first push turns on the bell while the second push stops it. I am writing the code for a microprocessor ie. I can do both, the question how was it designed in the models?
thank you
Eugen
Here are some of my RR videos:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLBDaXL96fhG8eRgI75dCgt-Q3Brf8XHmS
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLF2674BF4E3765682
KrokodilWas this function rather a toggle button? Ie the first push turns on the bell while the second push stops it.
Rob
Hi Rob
thank you for the answer. I know that the button on the ZW is not a toggle switch, but I can make it to have a toggle function. ( ie push to turn on and push to turn off) . The whistle is different it should work like on the real train, operates only when the engineer pulls the whistle lever etc.
i do not know how was made the bell function on those vintage models, was it also some motor driven device like the whistle?
Krokodil Was this function rather a toggle button? Ie the first push turns on the bell while the second push stops it.
No, not the button, the bell function is not dependent on the transformer, it is built-in to the bell function on the locomotive. The bell buttons are simply the reverse polarity of the whistle buttons and the first push turns on the bell, the second push turns it off. The whistle button would do the same if the track wires are swapped.
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Krokodili do not know how was made the bell function on those vintage models, was it also some motor driven device like the whistle?
Thank you!
I was studying the original ZW controller. ( my own is broken so I designed my new electronics and throw out the ZW electronic board completely).
I do not have the complete schematics, so just draw the schematics of the control elements ( potentiometers and switches). Partially I do not understand some part of the schematics, especially the function of those two potentiometers for the speed controller.
I solved all problems my controller works well, except the overload lamp, this protection is in external box of transformer.
Hi guys one last question for the operation of those vintage LIONEL trains regarding WHISTLE and and BELL.
According the information I have got here, the both functions cannot work simultaneously. The whistle requires positive DC in the tracks, while the BELL needs negative DC.
I do not know how did it work on classic controllers. What happened when both buttons were pushed ( whistle and bell). I also do not know how those buttons work on ZW.
My options are.
1. Whistle has priority, ie when active it interrupts the BELL and the bell will stop until the BELL button is pushed again.
2. The BELL button toggles internally the BELL function, ie the BELL is ON until the next BELL button operation. When the whistle button is pushed this interrupts the BELL and when the whistle is released the BELL will continue to operate until it is not dissabled by the BELL button.
3. The BELL button activates the BELL function let us say for 20 seconds and after that time it stops. When in this time frame the WHISTLE button is activated it interrupts the BELL signal but the time is running. When the WHISTLE is stopped the BELL continues until the timer does not stop it.
What do you think what is more prototypical or Lionel typical. Unfortunatelly I do not have any model with BELL function, so I cannot test it.
Thanks
KrokodilI do not know how did it work on classic controllers. What happened when both buttons were pushed ( whistle and bell). I also do not know how those buttons work on ZW.
This is a very large image, open it in a new window to see large version.
Krokodil2. The BELL button toggles internally the BELL function, ie the BELL is ON until the next BELL button operation. When the whistle button is pushed this interrupts the BELL and when the whistle is released the BELL will continue to operate until it is not dissabled by the BELL button.
Thank you Rob for the documentation and for your comments. I will improve my controller because there is no indication about the BELL function, ie the user does not know if the BELL is active or not. Of course I could add some LED but I want to keep the original box of ZW. So my BELL will be ON only for few seconds. The whistle does exactly the same as in your explanation.
(I would like to insert some pictures or videos but I have no idea how does it work in this Forum.)
A potential point of confusion I'm noticing is that there's a lot of mention of a ZW transformer, and then mention of whistle and bell fucntions, and mentions of older Lionel trainsI don't think anyone has clearly stated it here yet, but transformers with a "bell" button did not exist during the pre or postwar era! It wasn't until the 80s or 90s at the earliest, afaik, that the 'bell' feature was introduced. If your transformer has a "bell" button, it is a more modern transformer. Lionel has offered multiple transformers over the years inspired by the classic ZW produced in the postwar years, which still feature the ZW identification, but include features and construction not original to the postwar (vintage) ZW.Some pre and postwar models did have a bell- however, it was not activated by a transformer button! Rob already described how these worked:
ADCX Rob The bell was activated either mechanically with a cam on an axle(diesel switchers) or electro-mechanically with a duty-cycle(bi-metallic thermostatic strip) solenoid activated clanger(steam switchers).
The bell was activated either mechanically with a cam on an axle(diesel switchers) or electro-mechanically with a duty-cycle(bi-metallic thermostatic strip) solenoid activated clanger(steam switchers).
If your ZW has a "bell" button, it is not a vintage ZW. All of the original ZW transformers Lionel sold had a pair of switches that were pushed forward to activate locomotive whistles/horns, and back to momentarily cut track power to trip Locomotive reversing units. They have corresponding labels that say "whistle" and "direction".
More modern transformers now have a "whistle" and a "bell" button. These work how Rob describes them here:
ADCX Rob the bell function is not dependent on the transformer, it is built-in to the bell function on the locomotive. The bell buttons are simply the reverse polarity of the whistle buttons and the first push turns on the bell, the second push turns it off. The whistle button would do the same if the track wires are swapped.
the bell function is not dependent on the transformer, it is built-in to the bell function on the locomotive. The bell buttons are simply the reverse polarity of the whistle buttons and the first push turns on the bell, the second push turns it off. The whistle button would do the same if the track wires are swapped.
the Whistle and Bell buttons both work by sending a pulse of direct current into the track. On old, vintage Lionel trains from the 30s-60s, a DC relay located in the tender would close to activate the whistle/horn, but it only closed if there was DC voltage to the track. The postwar whistles do not care about the polarity of the DC, only if it is present or not.The modern system with whistle and bell buttons works a little different- now, polarity matters. The Whistle and Bell buttons are almost the same thing, but now the whistle has to be one polarity, and the bell is the other. A circuit board actuates the sounds instead of a DC relay. Whereas the "whistle" is a momentary switch that actuates the whistle for as long as it is held, the "bell" works a little differently- the button sends a DC pulse, and the circuit board is simply listening for that pulse- once it gets a pulse from the button being pressed, the bell sound will start playing, and will continue to play, without the operator doing anything. Pressing the bell button a second time will send a second pulse, which will tell the board to stop playing the bell sound.Because the transformer is sending out the same DC pulse, regardless of whether the bell starts ringing or stops, it might be inconvenient or difficult to have a pilot light on the transformer to show when the bell is ringing. The pilot light also wouldn't really serve a practical purpose, as the transformer only needs to send a momentary pulse of DC to activate the bell- in a sense, the bell switch cannot be left "on" or "off" because it's job is simply to send a pulse to the track when the bell button is pressed, and nothing more. The circuit board in the locomotive interprets that pulse, and if the bell is off, it turns it on. If the bell is on, it turns it off.Hope this helps, and I'm not stepping on anybody's toes with my explanation. Rob's explainations are 100% correct, but I got the impression Eugen was missing a few pieces of important context that tie everything together.-ElliePS:posting photos in the forum requires the images to be hosted somewhere on the internet- you need to "copy image address" to get a link that is compatible with the 'insert/edit image' function in the forum post editor. I reccomend limiting the width of your images to around 700 pixels (use the first open box after the word "dimensions". "Source" is where you pase the image address. It can be a little tricky to figure out.Videos can be posted too but the process is a little more counterintuitive and hard to explain.
Hi Elie
thank you for the comment. That means the toggle function for the bell is in the locomotive not in the ZW controller. Ie when I push the BELL button the impulse activates in the locomotive the BELL function relay ( bistable relay?) and this device remains in this status until the next BELL impulse comes from ZW.
This explains all my questions. Thank you! I will finish my project now and will place a short video on Youtube. ( I just wanted to be sure about the operation of the modern controller (ZW with all switches and buttons) and old controllers and make my unit compatible with vintage trains and probably also with modern models ( what I do not have).
Thanks to you and Rob for the help.
Eugen, yes, that is how it works- the 'toggle' happens inside the train, not the transformer. I do not know if the function is achieved with a relay or with solid state components, but I would suspect it's all solid state.-Ellie
Hi Ellie, thank you for the confirmation. From my point of view does not matter what is the toggle device inside of the train. The working principle was enough for my design. I do not know if I will have ever any train with BELL function.
Krokodil...this status until the next BELL impulse comes from ZW.
I cannot test it because my locomotive is from 1943 and has no bell, just a whistle. I am very happy that with my new up to date electronics it works excellently. I do not think that this locomotive is sensitive for the polarity as there is no rectifier in the engine. It just works with DC offset.
The relay Lionel used from the 30s through the 60s for the whistles and horns in their O gauge trains doesn't care about polarity- only recieving the DC offset.-Ellie
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