gregc riogrande5761 f these juicers could be used to power mulitple frogs, heck, why buy a Hex, just by one and power as many as you want. that's hardly what is being suggested. i agree, you shouldn't.
riogrande5761 f these juicers could be used to power mulitple frogs, heck, why buy a Hex, just by one and power as many as you want.
that's hardly what is being suggested.
i agree, you shouldn't.
Right, but where do you draw the line? Can you connect more than one frog to a single frog juicer connection? If so, how many is too many?
If it isn't stated in the instructions you can do it, or to what degree, then IMO, it's a risk that could result in trouble. Just seems risky to me. If someone actually does this, I'd be interested to hear how it turns out, and how many frogs to a single connection. At about $70 a pop for a Hex, I'm thinking I wouldn't want to risk frying one.
Rio Grande. The Action Road - Focus 1977-1983
It was shortly after the Hex Frog Juicer came out that they updated the firmware to allow it to be used as up to 3 auto reversers.
--Randy
Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's
Visit my web site at www.readingeastpenn.com for construction updates, DCC Info, and more.
there's certainly nothing wrong with following convention
a classic example of "mis-use" is using a pair of frog juicers as an auto reverser. i've read that some people have done this years ago. i don't believe they were originally intended for this pupose. (maybe the opposite is true, half an auto-reverser was used as a frog juicer).
now you can buy a quad frog juicer where either one or both pairs can be used as auto-reversers.
as an engineer, you always have to look beyond what something is designed for
greg - Philadelphia & Reading / Reading
riogrande5761My guess is that isn't how these are designed to work, or they would say so. Personally I wouldn't chance it, but that thats me.
You're not alone. I have four hex frog juicers on my layout I installed about six years ago. All 24 frogs have been properly energized from the moment I first powered them up.
They perform flawlessly behind (well, actually under) the scenes and I never give them any attention other than knowing that they are earning their keep.
Good Luck, Ed
riogrande5761f these juicers could be used to power mulitple frogs, heck, why buy a Hex, just by one and power as many as you want.
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gregc riogrande5761 If you did multiple frogs from one output, it could be trouble; further more, if you fry the Tam Valley frog juicer, you may void any warrenty by using them as not intended. i understand many modelers are less technical. But knowledgable modelers use commercial products in safe and innovative ways.
riogrande5761 If you did multiple frogs from one output, it could be trouble; further more, if you fry the Tam Valley frog juicer, you may void any warrenty by using them as not intended.
i understand many modelers are less technical. But knowledgable modelers use commercial products in safe and innovative ways.
Innovation is fine, but it if it voids the warranty, then the funs' over. If these juicers could be used to power mulitple frogs, heck, why buy a Hex, just by one and power as many as you want. My guess is that isn't how these are designed to work, or they would say so. Personally I wouldn't chance it, but that thats me.
MisterBeasleyChances are, many of them would never actually happen, but if you don't design in possible conflicts, you won't have them.
sometimes it's harder to avoid all possible conflicts and easier to design protection circuits. that's why we have circuit breakers in all sorts of devices.
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gregc wouldn't it be foolish to design a circuit that works by detecting a short but is damaged by a sustained short?
wouldn't it be foolish to design a circuit that works by detecting a short but is damaged by a sustained short?
Well, yes, but no matter how thoroughly a manufacturer tests something, in model railroading pretty much every installation will be somewhat unique. It might be the DCC system, or the type of track, or the speed of the switch machines, even the speed of the locomotive. You simply can't protect against any eventuality because there are just too many of them.
We are already looking at unlikely events here. Chances are, many of them would never actually happen, but if you don't design in possible conflicts, you won't have them.
It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse.
rrinkerThe thing is, while technically sound IF ALL CONDITIONS ARE MET
it's fair to say "I wouldn't do it" and if so you shouldn't do it.
but i think it makes sense. in the yard ladder situation i suggested, i think it is very unlikely that you would have a car parked with a wheel on a frog. similarly there's no guarantee that there isn't a wheel bridging the gaps at both ends of a reversing section.
but if this really does become a problem, you can simply buy another juicer and connect each frog independently. perhaps it makes more sense to share a juicer if you have 7 frogs and only one hex juicer.
i've been working on a 5 track staging yard with 2 reversing sections using dual frog juicers as auto reversers. we've had to deal with shorts in trackwork. the juicers handle them.
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The thing is, while technically sound IF ALL CONDITIONS ARE MET, there comes that one time when they aren't. It can be something as simple as leaving a cut of cars over a turnout, not just someone running another loco at the same time. So while with planning, you can technically run multiple frogs off one Juicer output, the conditions have to be met 100% of the time or it will fail. The conditions being, only one of those frogs will EVER be traversed by a loco, lighted car, or metal wheelset rolling stock at a time. The minut something alters those conditions, it stops working. And such shortcuts usually come back to bite someone on the posterior some point down the road.
As for using Tortoises after the track is in place - there are alternative methods of linking a switch machine to the turnout that do not require drilling a big hole right under the throwbar, risking damage to already installed turnouts. Instead, they need a small hole for a brass tube drilled adjacent to the turnout, which you cna do from the top with no risk to the track. I had to do this for one turnout where there wasn;t enough room next to a crossmemebr even for a tiny servo, though I mut my swinging arm between the ties instead of alongside. A Tortoise, a servo, or even a solenoid machine can be used with linkage of this type - with a Tortoise, it can even be mounted on its side so it doesn't stick down as far, and you get exactly the motion you need.
All track is in.
rrebell Wanted to use tortoise motors but they really don't wook with 2" foam, let alone two with 6" foam.
Wanted to use tortoise motors but they really don't wook with 2" foam, let alone two with 6" foam.
Yeah, my understanding is on the Hex Frog Juicer, each out put goes to one frog, not multiple. If you did multiple frogs from one output, it could be trouble; further more, if you fry the Tam Valley frog juicer, you may void any warrenty by using them as not intended.
I have two Tam Valley Hex frog juicers so far and I plan on using them to power any metal frogs I have in staging and in the main yard. I'll probably need around 7 of them in total, so I figure I'll buy a couple at a time as I work on the layout.
All of my Tortoise machines are mounted with 2 inches of foam, except one that has about 4 inches. It just takes longer pieces of music wire. One of the adjustments on the Tortoise controls the range of motion of the wire.
MisterBeasleyA yard ladder is probably one situation where you definitely need independent control of all the frogs.
yes, you're right. i was thinking of the type of ladder at the bottom image below. the 3 rightmost turnouts would not be used togther, could in fact be controlled by a single frog juicer (of course you wouldn't need frog juicers with tortoise motors
The 6 outputs fromt he frog juicer are completely independent. If one trips, the other 5 do not.
If you use one putput to run 5 frogs each, then yes, all 5 will flip, because they are wired to the same output. If there is NO CHANCE of metal wheels rolling stock or another loco or lighted car passing over one of the other 4 frogs at the same time, you can get away with one frog juicer output controlling multiple frogs.
A yard lead would be a BAD place to use one output for multiple frogs - you have multiple frogs being traversed simultaneously while shoving cars in the yard.
I get people want to save money, but some of these shortcuts aren;t worth the hassle they can cause. If the expense of Frog Juicers is too great, use switch machine contacts or even a microswitch (which will work with hand thrown turnouts) to set the frog polarity. They are inexpensive, and once you realize which contacts close when the lever is released vs when the lever is pressed, it's not hard to wire. The whole reason frog juicers were created was to set proper frog polarity in complex situations where it isn;t exactly obvious which frog should have shich polarity - specifically, Tim Warris's CNJ Bronx Terminal layout where you actually have turnouts within turnouts and complex crossings. Yes, it makes it easy to wire, as all you need to do is hook the output wire to the frog and let it figure out which track bus wire should be connected to the frog, but of course there is a cost penalty associated with making it that easy. Like anything else, it''s a tradeoff. Cheaper and a big more work, or more expensive and less work. For most common turnout situations, like a simple siding, there are far less expensive ways to power the frog than a Frog Juicer.
gregc starman If I use a Frog Juicer that controls 6 frogs, and an engine crosses one of the frogs causing it to flip, then the other 5 frogs will also flip. Is this right? yes. that's an interesting approach. may make sense on a yard ladder with a common mainline track
starman If I use a Frog Juicer that controls 6 frogs, and an engine crosses one of the frogs causing it to flip, then the other 5 frogs will also flip. Is this right?
yes. that's an interesting approach. may make sense on a yard ladder with a common mainline track
Each of the outputs should be independent and should not affect the others. The only issues from this thread come from using the six outputs of the juicer to control more than six turnouts by "double dipping" and connecting more than one frog to the same output.
A yard ladder is probably one situation where you definitely need independent control of all the frogs.
DCC allows you to run multiple trains and not be concerned with blocks for the track power and direction. For that reason, I don't think you should deliberately create possible conflicts between trains, even if you typically run only one at a time.
Thanks, I understand.
Jack
Presumably the frogs are all connected to separate outputs of the hex frog juicer and only one changes.
If you are using a hex frog to power 30 frogs, your guess is as good as mine.
Henry
COB Potomac & Northern
Shenandoah Valley
"Frog juicers are automatic, so any piece of rolling stock with metal wheels could trigger it, thus flipping any other frogs connected to that juicer."
I want to be sure I understand. If I use a Frog Juicer that controls 6 frogs, and an engine crosses one of the frogs causing it to flip, then the other 5 frogs will also flip. Is this right?
Thanks,
It might work if it was well thought out and you did the same thing every time. However if you got a wild hair and sent the local down to work the coal mine conflicted with what you were doing in the yard, you might have a problem.
I suppose it depends on if anything else can be on any of the frogs on the whole layout. Frog juicers are automatic, so any piece of rolling stock with metal wheels could trigger it, thus flipping any other frogs connected to that juicer. It doesn't have to be a locomotive.
How are you controlling the turnouts? Tortoises provide a SPDT contact set which may be used for frog power. Pecos have an add-on to the machine to do the same thing. I think Caboose makes manual throws with contact sets, too.
You could get away with this for some time, but eventually you may get a dead short you'll have to deal with.
I know you can get a frog juicer for up to 6 frogs. My question is do you really need more than that even if you have many more frogs if you are just running one engine at a time or maybe two if they are in separate areas compleatly, like one working a yard ?