Virginian Railroad
Bob Nelson
Milliamp Hour (mAh)
Milliamps Hour (mAh) is important because it's the easiest way to distinguish the strength or capacity of a battery. The higher the mAh, the longer the battery will last. Batteries with different mAh ratings are interchangeable. If your battery is rechargeable then the mAh rating is how long the battery will last per charge.
Milliamps Hour is 1/1000th of a Amp Hour, so a 1000mAh = 1.0Ah
Think of a cars gas tank. Voltage is how much gas is being used, and mAh is the size of the gas tank. The bigger the gas tank (mAh) rating the longer the device will run. If your battery is rechargeable, then think of the gas tank as refillable (rechargeable).------------------------------------------------So I found a 9-volt NiMh battery with 250mAh rating!!! http://www.batteryspace.com/index.asp?PageAction=VIEWPROD&ProdID=1995The BCR idea is interesting, though. I may e-mail J & W and ask them if the BCR is useable for this installation. If it is, that would be VERY cool
Sir James: If your have one of these volt/amp gauges and it's for a postwar ZW (not a NEW ZW), I would be interested in taking it off your hands. Let me know.
sir james I wrote: Deputy, I'm not sure anymore,when I got tired of the MTH battery thing I replaced them all with BCRs and they are all in a bag. It is the 9 volt type battery though. And since that item has been sitting for several years now I would guess the battery would be low or even dead. I have no idea if a BCR would work in the meter so DON'T DO THAT.
Deputy, I'm not sure anymore,when I got tired of the MTH battery thing I replaced them all with BCRs and they are all in a bag. It is the 9 volt type battery though. And since that item has been sitting for several years now I would guess the battery would be low or even dead. I have no idea if a BCR would work in the meter so DON'T DO THAT.
"IT's GOOD TO BE THE KING",by Mel Brooks
Charter Member- Tardis Train Crew (TTC) - Detroit3railers- Detroit Historical society Glancy Modular trains- Charter member BTTS
Jon: I was more concerned about getting ripped off because the transformer was advertised as a 275 watt and not a 250 watt. They do sell 250 watt transformers on Ebay, and they go for considerably less than the 275 watt versions. Even though, as you say, there isn't much difference. Chief: I tend to let experts in each field do their thing. I am sure no expert on rebuilding transformers. If there was something faulty with it that you could tell by looking at it, I wouldn't be able to spot it. I also don't have the high end test gauges nor do I know how to read them to tell if an electrical problem exists. This place in SC also installs the rollers with an arbor press, which is the way Lionel originally installed them. With something like this I'm just more comfortable having someone who has specialized in doing this for over 20 years. Or as Dirty Harry says..."a man has to know his limitations".
Sir James: Thanks for that info. I didn't even know that gauge setup was battery operated. I figured it just ran off the current of the transformer. What kind of battery is installed in it? Nicad or Nimh? Dep
God bless TCA 05-58541 Benefactor Member of the NRA, Member of the American Legion, Retired Boss Hog of Roseyville , KC&D Qualified
Thanks for the info Ben. I was in worry mode for a while thinking I got it so cheap because it wasn't a 275 watt version. I owe you I know a place that does really good rebuilds on postwar transformers at reasonable prices:http://www.lioneltransformer.com/I got my rebuilt KW there and they did an outstanding job. There's a bunch of stuff I want done to this one and I trust this place to do a good job. I want the cord changed, all new terminal screws,16 amp diodes, transparent red and green lenses, and a complete rehab of the internals. Their prices are reasonable and I can get a repro box and instructions from them too.When they get done it will be as close as I can get to brand new.I also located the volt/amp gauge accessory (Lionel 6-14077) and I'm ordering it tomorrow. I got it for $99. Regular price is $125. I looked all over Ebay but only found ones for the new ZW...nothing for postwar. Finally found a place online that had one brand new one still in the box for postwar ZW.
Dep,
Yours is definitely a later "Type R" ZW.
Notice how neat the end of the coil laminations are. If you had a 250watt Z, or a non-R 275 watt ZW(which do exist, despite what the othewise excellent posted link would have you believe), the coil looks significantly different.
Here's a picture of my non-R 275 watt ZW for comparison
By the way, both of my ZWs are nearly dead silent. I have not personally tried the fix posted, as I have not needed to. I have no doubt, based on the evidence I've seen, that it will work.
Good grief....now I have to worry if I got a 250 or 275 watt transformer. Can anyone tell from these internal pics if it's a 250 or 275? That link wasn't clear at all.
Unless the unit was dropped at some point in time with the result being the laminated stack is loose or the coils relative to the stack are loose the unit's hum is fairly low.
To assess the relative size and weight of a PW ZW and a Z-4000 you need to address the power handling capabilites of the two devices. The total output available on all four channels of the pw ZW is only equal to the output of one channel on the 4000.
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