Why would you want to? They come pre-made.
Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale
Brent, you must have sucked at hide and seek! You can't find anything!!!
Charles Ro has them for $12.00
go here
jaabat wrote: Brent, you must have sucked at hide and seek! You can't find anything!!! Charles Ro has them for $12.00go here
You can also get it direct from Lionel for $13 + shipping.
610-5905-001
http://www.lionel.com/CustomerService/Findex.cfm
You can build one of these, but by the time you acquire all the parts and then put it together, $13 + shipping is a bargain.
Regards, Roy
Just remember that you need 2 of these if you want a whistle and a bell to sound. The current issue of CTT shows how to hook them up singly or as a pair. The diagrams are on page eleventeen.
Jim
I opened my sound activation button to check it out. It's got 6 or 8 (it was awhile ago) 3 amp diodes in series jumpered by a normally closed switch. When you push the button you apply dc.
With two buttons you reverse the red and black wires, one gives you whistle the other gives you a bell. The result of applying either a positve or negative DC to the center Rail.
Considering making the circuit board and finding NC push button switches it probably doesn't pay to make this for yourself. Most trainshops carry them or can get them.
jaabat wrote: The diagrams are on page eleventeen.Jim
The diagrams are on page eleventeen.
just wondering whats eleventeen, i knew i shouldnt have slept threw school! j/k
well i think this is an important thread for new ppl such as myself who dont know how to do this...thanks brent
There was an article in CTT about six or seven years ago about building your own horn/whistle box from parts from Radio Shack, however unless you are putting together three or more the costs out ways the costs of buying them pre-made.
Lee F.
chuck,
I agree that the Lionel horn/whistle button is cheaper and probally the better way to go than building your own. With building your own you have to solder stuff together & make sure your diodes are wired correctly and you can find the right size little box to mount it into, too much work for a model train project. I did this project and don't recommend anybody else doing it as the box did not work as described in the article, may have bad switch or diodes in the box but my unit didn't work as described, used all the called for switches(had the exact part number) or diodes from Radio Shack, No substitue parts at all!!! The only thing that I can think of is that I fried it with my 275 watt ZW.
Bob Nelson
To get this back to toy trains, the 4-way switch has the same function as the drum and contact fingers of an e-unit: It connects two wires to two other wires in each of two possible ways. In the e-unit, red is connected to yellow and green to blue in one direction; and red is connected to blue and green to yellow in the other direction.
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