Did any of YUZ GIZ ever put the Turbo Smoke units in that TAS has. I sent them my LIONEL MOHAWK and they installed one for me works great. But I don't want to send another one cause of the turn around time. Is this a tough thing to install?
Thanks,
laz57
God bless TCA 05-58541 Benefactor Member of the NRA, Member of the American Legion, Retired Boss Hog of Roseyville , KC&D Qualified
CHIEF, is that just regular pink insulation?
Thanks LUTHER, I am going to take the one apart and check it out. The GIZ at train America Studios are at YORK and I will also ask them about it. I don't think it will be that hard to do being it is going into another Lionel Mohawk. I just don't want to send it out and have about a 8 week wait til it returns. They did a great job on my other engine with the smoke unit and EOB unit.
THANKS again.
Took apart the Lionel Mohawk that TAS worked on , last nite. Interesting how they had epoxied the unit into the top of the shell. They kinda made a harness out of plastic the epoxied it to the shell to hold it in place.
While at YORK on friday I will pick up another unit and do the same. They really put out the smoke. Chuga chuga woo woo!
Hi Laz 57
I've been looking into doing a similar project with a Lionel Hudson. Hope you can give us and update and maybe some pictures when you complete the job. In my case I know just from looking at the dimensions of the unit that it would be a tight fit and would probably mean coming up with a new way to get the headlight mounted. Good luck
Ole
I'll let you know when I start OLE1. I'm getting the unit hopfully on friday at YORK.
I put in a new turbo smoke unit in my Lionel Mohawk last nite that I purchased from TAS. It wasn't to bad to put in hooked up all the wires and tested it, wouldn't work in forward, so changed wire leads around and now it won't work in reverse. Got to call the TAS GIZ today and ask why it will only work in one direction? There really isn't that much to hooking the smoke unit up, 3 wires, one hot one ground and one that goes to the cherry switch. Maybe those GIZ will tell me whats going on?
Otherwise the most difficult thing was making a harness to hold the smoke unit in place. Not a big deal with ZAP a Pak instant glue it was a breeze that stuff works great. Its super glue with an excellerator that you spray on the glue and hardens instantly.
I'll let you know what the TAS GIZ say?
CHIEF, I only have the three wires. I don't follow you on the double up part. Please explain further.
CHIEF this is made to run in command off of 18 v.
Well I called DA GIZ from TAS yesterday about my turbo smoke unit and they told me that it won't work with the existing board that is in the Mohawk. But that I could work it off the pickup rollers and to put a switch in it to shut of the smoke when on a siding. Did the hook up and all works great, LOTS O SMOKE. Going to get another one in April at YORK.
CHIEF you were right about running it off the track power.
CHIEF what do I need to build the bridge rectifier? Do I get it at radio shack? Thanks for the tip.
The bridge rectifier is a way to get 4 diodes in a single package to put in series with the load to reduce the voltage. It is not actually used as a rectifier in this case.
Connect the + and - pins together. Then use the other two pins to wire the rectifier module in series with the load. You can use multiple rectifier modules in series to get the voltage as low as you need. Radio Shack's 276-1152 1.4-ampere 100-volt part for $1.49 is a good choice for a smoke unit.
If you find that you need finer adjustment, you can use half of a rectifier module by connecting to the (wired together) + and - pins and either or both of the other two pins.
Bob Nelson
lionelsoni wrote: Connect the + and - pins together. Then use the other two pins to wire the rectifier module in series with the load. You can use multiple rectifier modules in series to get the voltage as low as you need. Radio Shack's 276-1152 1.4-ampere 100-volt part for $1.49 is a good choice for a smoke unit.
Thanks BOB,
Can I just get a 4 ohm resistor and wire it in series to reduce the voltage by 4 volts?
Soldered together
In series
Hooked to smoke unit and tested [see the two "hot" wires connected together]
As it ended up, only needed three to reduce the voltage for diesel. If you want more smoke, take one away, less smoke, add one. Hope this helps.
Yes, you can use a resistor; and, for a case like this where the load current is constant, a resistor is practical. The resistance will depend on the current that the load draws at the reduced voltage; so you can't count on 4 volts for 4 ohms unless you know that the current will be 1 ampere.
Aside from trial and error, a way to calculate the resistance needed is to put some known resistance, say 1 ohm, in series with the smoke unit and then power it from an adjustable (sine-wave, not CW80) transformer, set for the smoke performance that you want. Measure the voltage across this test resistor, divide that by the resistance, and you have the current. Then measure the voltage across the smoke unit and subtract that from the track voltage to get the voltage drop needed. Divide the voltage drop by the current that you already calculated, and that is the resistance that you need to use.
To get the power rating for the dropping resistor, multiply the voltage drop by the current. Then get a resistor with about double that rating, so that it will run cooler.
Thanks BOB and CHIEF.
I'll do calculations tonite and let YUZ GIZ know what resistor I need. Seems to be the easier way to go with this one being I just want to drop it 4 volts.
Thanks again.
lionelsoni wrote: Aside from trial and error, a way to calculate the resistance needed is to put some known resistance, say 1 ohm, in series with the smoke unit and then power it from an adjustable (sine-wave, not CW80) transformer, set for the smoke performance that you want. Measure the voltage across this test resistor, divide that by the resistance, and you have the current. Then measure the voltage across the smoke unit and subtract that from the track voltage to get the voltage drop needed. Divide the voltage drop by the current that you already calculated, and that is the resistance that you need to use.
The reason I suggested the series resistor method for calculating the current is that AC ammeters are not that common. The 1-ohm value was just an example. If the current is as low as Luther's 200-milliampere example, you would find it difficult to measure the tiny voltage that would result and would have to try again with a larger resistance. Again, the resistance value would not matter as long as you know what it is so that you could calculate the current by dividing voltage by resistance.
A resistor might well be smaller than the bridge rectifiers. But Frank's rectifiers are much heftier than the 1.4-ampere ones that I suggested for a smoke generator, which are about the size of an aspirin tablet.
Using the resistor will also build up heat some where else, no? So will it not be better to go the way of the bridge rectifier?
Thanks GIZ,
JELECTRIC has a few of the bridge rectifiers that he is going to send me. Thanks again for this info. I'll let you know how it turns out.
Lionel collector, stuck in an N scaler's modelling space.
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