Craig North Carolina
Ron51777 My main line has gaps already with a wire on both tracks as feeder wires and my spur tracks to industries are gaped on both sides and I am using the atlas spdt switches is this ok to still use two wires on each section of flex track to power my blocks and if so what is the best way to do this? No track doubles back onto itself. Just have a main line around the room with 4 spurs coming off the main line in different places. Thanks
My main line has gaps already with a wire on both tracks as feeder wires and my spur tracks to industries are gaped on both sides and I am using the atlas spdt switches is this ok to still use two wires on each section of flex track to power my blocks and if so what is the best way to do this? No track doubles back onto itself. Just have a main line around the room with 4 spurs coming off the main line in different places. Thanks
The easiest way to do this, and it will also give you more reliable power feed, is to run all your block feed wires to a terminal strip. attach all rails on the same side together with jumpers at the strip, making this your common rail. Feed this directly to one side of your power pack. The other side of your power pack goes to the SPDT switches, then run lines from each switch to the terminal strip connection for the individual blocks.
Atlas compones are designed for common rail wiring. So you have to make one rail common, it doesn't need insulated joiners. It doesn't matter WHICH rail you make common, but it must remain consistent. You can;t have the inner rail on one section common and then switch to the outer rail in the next block.
The 'common' mistake is thinking that since one rail is common and has no insulated rail joiners, you only need a single feed to it. This will likely bring headaches as your trains stall due to lack of power on the common rail side (rail joiners are NOT great electrical connections).
--Randy
Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's
Visit my web site at www.readingeastpenn.com for construction updates, DCC Info, and more.
Hi!
Yes, the selector switches work just fine for DC block control. You only need to shut down one lead, and it really doesn't matter which one (assuming of course that block is totally isolated from other blocks.
In my opinion, working with and learning about wiring a DC layout will greatly help you make the transition some day to DCC. Its also less expensive, and DC is more "forgiving" than DCC.
I say this from experience, for I've been a DC MR since the early '60s, and only just last year went to DCC.
ENJOY,
Mobilman44
ENJOY !
Living in southeast Texas, formerly modeling the "postwar" Santa Fe and Illinois Central