I decided to learn about adding lights to some buildings. I'm comfortable with the mounting,hiding wires, soldering ect.
Dave and Mel both, offered advice but I need help to put it where I can understand
What I need help with is power sorce,wireing and volts and stuff.
Lets say; I get a bundle of GOW bulbs from MM. 12/14v AC/DC .o75amp.
Can I run them with an DC power pack,I have some old tyco, and a newer pack,[ I can'tget to it right now to tell you more.]
If I run 4 lamps; Do I need 48v or 12v ?
Can I wire like a house; A main line and then branch off 2 wires for each lamp ?
How many lamps on a run?
My trains run on DCC
Thanks
UNCLEBUTCH I decided to learn about adding lights to some buildings. I'm comfortable with the mounting,hiding wires, soldering ect. Dave and Mel both, offered advice but I need help to put it where I can understand What I need help with is power sorce,wireing and volts and stuff. Lets say; I get a bundle of GOW bulbs from MM. 12/14v AC/DC .o75amp. Can I run them with an DC power pack,I have some old tyco, and a newer pack,[ I can'tget to it right now to tell you more.]
yes
you would only need that 48v if they were in series. which isn't a good idea. so 12v is the answer
Yup. That's a parallel system. just supply it with 12v and connect one wire from a light to one "feeder", and the other wire to the other "feeder". If you supply a lower voltage, maybe because you've got a "speed control", the lights will get dimmer (maybe that's good, maybe not) and last longer (always good).
About as many as you want, as long as your power supply can supply the current. if each bulb draws .075amps, just multiply it out. 10 lights would be .75amp. You'll need a power supply that can deliver that.
You generally want the "feeder" wires as big as possible, within reason. Probably somewhere between 18ga and 12ga, depending on how many lights you're running and how far it is from the power supply to the lights.
Since your lights will be an independant system, that doesn't matter.
Thanks guys, I'm starting to see the light, Just a little more please
I got 3 DCpower packs
Tyco 895 17VDC 18VAC
Tyco 899 18VDC 9VA 20VAC
MRC Tech II 20VDC 16.5VAC 20.5VDC 16VA
Witch if any would you use? AC or DC? If I use the track terms.will the speed control, control the Vs to the lights for DC
With these packs, use DC. Set the throttle to zero. Attach the lights. Hook up a multi-meter on DC to the wires. Slowly increase the speed until you see nine volts DC and you like the glow. Put a stop on the front of the power pack.
The AC is not adjustable. Also, with the required load on the AC, the actual voltage will be lower. The voltage can be higher with no load.
I did that many years ago for a small layout.
Edit.
No idea if you have a meter. The link below show you what I use I have four Harbor Freight meters for some years.
as an extra, they read about 13.6 VAC on my NCE Power Cab.
http://www.trainelectronics.com/Meter_Workshop/index.htm
http://www.trainelectronics.com/Meter_HF/index.htm
Downside of these meters is they do not read AC current. For that I run the AC current through a 01. Ohm resistor 1% - 5W and measure the voltage across the resistor. Ohms laws does the rest.
Rich
If you ever fall over in public, pick yourself up and say “sorry it’s been a while since I inhabited a body.” And just walk away.