When K-Line first came out with this revamped steamer, they went with a slightly unorthadox manner of having to use a specical whilstle control button that came with the steam engine. I remember when CTT first reviewed this loco some years ago and rightfully so, complained about this unusual move of not being able to use a typical Lionel whistle button on your transformer.
Most of the standard early K-Line transformers were simple budget affairs that ran the trains effectively alright, but had no whistle button on them. Hence the separate button that came with the loco. Maybe someone else who has had direct experience can chime in here. I have run these steamers and they are very smooth runners, but have never taken the whistle tender apart.
If you have an adjustable DC power pack, you might try touching those wires to the center pick up and one wheel to see how much DC current is needed to activate the whistle. CTT published a book on Train Tips and there's a wiring diagram in there for making your own whistle control button.
brianel, Agent 027
"Praise the Lord. I may not have everything I desire, but the Lord has come through for what I need."
I also bought one of these engines at a train show a couple of years ago - it was too good a deal to pass up. The K-952 Whistle Controller puts out a higher voltage than the output from a Lionel transformer, I haven't checked it in a while but I'm thinking that the output is either 6VDC or 9VDC - checking with a old HO power pack would work. I've been able to run a recent production Lionel "freight" style tender with a traditional air whistle behind the engine, so the K-Line tender hasn't seen much use.
If I have a chance to dig out the K-Line controller this weekend, I'll check the output and update the post. Enjoy the engine, it runs very smoothly and the smoke unit output is great!
The controller with the external power pack was to raise the track voltage ~ 6 volts as the K-Line transformers were at the time self contained w/o whistle controllers & compensation windings.
The alternative was a complicated controller with a choke coil & shunt windings around a simple diode... similar to the Lionel 167/167C which would have been more expensive to make than a China-built wall-wart pack.
The relatively low current draw of K-Line locos, which never had open-frame series wound universal motors, led to the eventual use of the K-952B/ K-952C controllers with a full-wave bridge rectifier, a slide switch("Whistle/Horn" / "Other") and a button to activate. The full wave DC was enough compensation from the AC that the speed change was minimal if at all, and it was a cheap controller to build.
Rob
Apparently so. It is wired, in series, from the transformer to the track and, if I remember correctly, there are some diodes arranged in there in such a way as to resemble a bridge rectifier.
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