Login
or
Register
Home
»
Garden Railways
»
Forums
»
Garden Railroading
»
New to garden railroading. power question
New to garden railroading. power question
1682 views
6 replies
Order Ascending
Order Descending
Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
New to garden railroading. power question
Posted by
Anonymous
on Wednesday, April 14, 2004 11:43 PM
I'm new to garden railroading and in the planning stage of my LGB layout. Probably going to be around 50 feet total, but I'm sure I will add on over time. I was looking at purchasing an LGB 50111 transformer and 52120 throttle. Is this overkill for this small of a layout? Should I just use the stock transformer that came with my starter set and buy the upgrades later if I expand? I'm sure I will have more questions as I go along.
thanks
Reply
Edit
RhB_HJ
Member since
December 2003
From: Coldstream, BC Canada
969 posts
Posted by
RhB_HJ
on Thursday, April 15, 2004 2:10 AM
Welcome to the FUN,
If you're aiming to go with LGB electrical components you picked the right combo (50111 & 52120)!
The Starterpack power is
very
limited!
Cheers HJ
http://www.rhb-grischun.ca/ http://www.easternmountainmodels.com
Reply
Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
Posted by
Anonymous
on Thursday, April 15, 2004 4:04 AM
hi lgbelsinore
My transformer has 50110 on it which I assume is the LGB cat no it is rated at 90va 18 volts the controler is 51070 and rated at 5A do not go less than that for power rating.
If you are thinking of the little all weather signal cabin/switch tower top looking controler
my advice is don't I have seen these blow up with frightenig regularity and heard a lot of stories of them blowing up.
The little controler that comes with the starter sets is good for that and nothing else
it will not even cope with a double headed short train where the two locomotives are LGB 2020's the little green one that is LGB's trade mark badge with no lghted coaches or caboose.
Once set up perminatly in the garden the disadvantage with the combination I use is that it will have to be mounted in a weatherproof enclosure so when not in use the door is shut and the transformer and controler are protected from the weather
regards John
Reply
Edit
smcgill
Member since
July 2003
From: S.Easton , Mass.
593 posts
Posted by
smcgill
on Thursday, April 15, 2004 5:26 AM
I used the starter power pack untill --- I had more cars/lights-bigger engines --double headed 2 engines etc.
I switched to the Aristo train engineer and matching power pack.(10 amps I think)
No problems yet.
The next layout will be bigger and this unit should do well.
Reply
bman36
Member since
January 2014
1,264 posts
Posted by
bman36
on Thursday, April 15, 2004 7:19 AM
lgbelsinore,
First off welcome to the forum! Great bunch here and we hope you enjoy it. My best advice would be to purchase now so you can expand later. I have successfully run over 300' of track with an Aristo 3.5 amp pack. Although I only ran a single loco. In the long run you would be better off with a bigger pack so you are ready to expand. Hope this helps. Later eh...Brian.
Reply
Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
Posted by
Anonymous
on Thursday, April 15, 2004 10:02 AM
Ok, the post about the throttle blowing up kinda worries me. What about an Aristo 5450 3.5 amp with a 5401 controller? Or the 55460 ultima 10 amp power supply with a 5401 controller?
thanks again
Reply
Edit
Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
Posted by
Anonymous
on Thursday, April 15, 2004 10:31 AM
Hi lgbelsinore
The problem what ever it is only seems to affect that one particular controler
a ten amp power supply sounds good get the bigest most powerfull transformer you can even if it sounds like going into overkill you can bet in the long run it will not be.
There will always be that cool acssesory that needs electricety to run that you want to add either by purchase or by building it your self and it will not be fun if the thermal breaker starts triping all the time.
I am not familier with the controlers you mention and don't have the latest catalogue to be able to check upon them.
but get the bigest and best you can afford the two areas not to skimp on are power for your control ccts, and locomotive power on those two always get the best you can
and your trains should always work.
regards John
Reply
Edit
Search the Community
FREE EMAIL NEWSLETTER
Get the
Garden Railways
newsletter delivered to your inbox twice a month
Sign up
By signing up you may also receive occasional reader surveys and special offers from
Garden Railways
magazine. Please view our
privacy policy
More great sites from Kalmbach Media
Terms Of Use
|
Privacy Policy
|
Copyright Policy