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Problem with Polar Express Coaches Locked

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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, January 10, 2007 10:38 AM

 Dampfmann wrote:
I have some digital pictures to share. I read the "How to Post Pictures" thread at the beginning of the forum, but it didn't make much sense. I'm rather new at this so can anyone give the "For Dummies" version of posting pictures. Right now they are on my camera, but I can easily move them to iphoto. What's next?

As far as the copper contacts, I didn't see any loose wires or anything else that might cause a potential short. When I took the top of the coach off and peered inside, I found more fried wires. I want to post the photos so you can see the actual wiring for yourselves.

Someone inquired about crossing between blocks/ovals. Nope. Each oval is independent-- no crossing over. Nothin' too exciting.

Martin


Martin,
You need a host for your pictures.

What you need to do is save the images to your HardDrive. Then goto http://www.imageshack.us/ they are a free image host.  Download and install the toolbar.  Then you will click on the 'Upload' button.  Select the images you want to upload and they are there.  Imageshack will also give you the codes to copy and paste into your forum post so your images display in the post.

Hope this helps.

Brent

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Posted by lionelsoni on Wednesday, January 10, 2007 8:58 AM
Last time:  How many pickups does each car have, both the new ones with the problem and the old ones without the problem?

Bob Nelson

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Posted by ADCX Rob on Tuesday, January 9, 2007 11:00 PM

 Dampfmann wrote:
I have some digital pictures to share. I read the "How to Post Pictures" thread at the beginning of the forum, but it didn't make much sense. I'm rather new at this so can anyone give the "For Dummies" version of posting pictures. Right now they are on my camera, but I can easily move them to iphoto. What's next?

As far as the copper contacts, I didn't see any loose wires or anything else that might cause a potential short. When I took the top of the coach off and peered inside, I found more fried wires. I want to post the photos so you can see the actual wiring for yourselves.

Someone inquired about crossing between blocks/ovals. Nope. Each oval is independent-- no crossing over. Nothin' too exciting.

Martin

Now it sounds like you have a dead spot or compromised center rail connection somewhere in the loop for the PE, as it certainly seems that the power for the loco & smoke unit is being drawn through the car wiring at some point.

Try running just the engine at a fairly low speed around the layout and see if there are any obvious power drop-outs.  There could be loose pins or connections on O-27 or FasTrack. 

Rob 

Rob

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Posted by trigtrax on Tuesday, January 9, 2007 9:45 PM
I doubt the gauge of the wire is too small. Lamps in this voltage range normally pull about 100 milliamps. If you're melting insulation and plastic you've got a short somewhere.
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Posted by traindaddy1 on Tuesday, January 9, 2007 9:06 PM
Dampfmann: No solution from this "older" guy but I agree with your comment about "Lionel Tech" as I have almost given up on talking to them. If anyone has an answer, it's the guys (and gals) on this forum. Good luck!
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Posted by Dampfmann on Tuesday, January 9, 2007 8:36 PM
I have some digital pictures to share. I read the "How to Post Pictures" thread at the beginning of the forum, but it didn't make much sense. I'm rather new at this so can anyone give the "For Dummies" version of posting pictures. Right now they are on my camera, but I can easily move them to iphoto. What's next?

As far as the copper contacts, I didn't see any loose wires or anything else that might cause a potential short. When I took the top of the coach off and peered inside, I found more fried wires. I want to post the photos so you can see the actual wiring for yourselves.

Someone inquired about crossing between blocks/ovals. Nope. Each oval is independent-- no crossing over. Nothin' too exciting.

Martin
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Posted by EIS2 on Tuesday, January 9, 2007 1:33 PM
 Dampfmann wrote:

Okay, here is some more information.  I don't have an extravagent layout... yet.  Until I get to that point I am running my trains in ovals around a 4' x 8' table.  Each oval is its own block.  The most voltage I run any train is about 16 volts.  Any faster and they start flying off the track. 

I am surprised that you can get anywhere close to 16 volts running a conventional engine.  I'm wondering if you might have a problem with the engine that it is requiring such a high voltage.

Earl

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Posted by brianel027 on Tuesday, January 9, 2007 12:39 PM

Martin, here's a shot out of the dark since you've already got the for repairs.

I'm a low-end do-it-yourself expert. Yes, I agree the companies do use very thin wire. It is not always the gauge of the wire, but the amount of actual stranded metal inside the wiring. There are times where the outside of the wire looks good, but inside there's a break.

This happened to me once and might have been your trouble. Pop the roller pickup assembly off the car using a straight edge screw driver. It pops off quite easily. On the underside you will see two strips of copper metal riveted to the pplastic assembly. One piece goes to the roller pickup of the center rail and is folded with a small slot for the roller pickup. One piece is longer and goes to the wheel axles on each side of the plastic assembly.

Notice each piece of copper has a fold: The one for the roller pickup is on the far back end. The other has the fold midway alongside the other piece of copper for the roller pickup. Two things could be happening here. One is the the wire soldered to the wheel axle pickup has either solder or a couple strands of wire that is touching the other pickup. The other is that the fold of the axle pickup copper piece is making contact with the other center rail copper piece. If the fold on the axle pickup is angled, it is possible for the roller itself to hit this when the train is on the track. Intermident contact between these two piece might not be enough to short the train or trip the circuit breaker, but it could VERY easily heat up the wires very quickly.

This happened to me once, and I bent the pickup contacts a little and the problem went away immediately. I strongly suspect this could be your problem.

brianel, Agent 027

"Praise the Lord. I may not have everything I desire, but the Lord has come through for what I need."

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Posted by lionelsoni on Tuesday, January 9, 2007 12:27 PM
How many pickups does each car have, both the new ones with the problem and the old ones without the problem?  Are the tracks of the two loops connected?  Do you run trains across the gap between loops while one loop is powered by one transformer output and the other loop powered by another transformer output?

Bob Nelson

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Posted by Dampfmann on Tuesday, January 9, 2007 12:21 PM

Okay, here is some more information.  I don't have an extravagent layout... yet.  Until I get to that point I am running my trains in ovals around a 4' x 8' table.  Each oval is its own block.  The most voltage I run any train is about 16 volts.  Any faster and they start flying off the track. 

Again, I am using a ZW transformer and have not had this problem with any other cars, just the PE coaches.  I have had the wires burn using both O-27 and Fastrack. 

I contacted Lionel about this problem and they told me to take the coaches to the authorized repair shop in my area.  The woman I spoke to on the phone in the "tech dept." was of little help at all. 

I took the cars to the local repair facility.  I haven't heard back from the hobby shop about what they think is the cause of the melted wires.  When I do, I'll pass this information along.

In the mean time, I think the gauge of the wires is too thin.  They are about as thick as a piece of angel hair spaghetti.  It certainly isn't as thick as the wiring on other post-war cars I have.  If you have PE coaches, do yours have wire that is equally as thin.  (I'll have to measure the exact gauge when I'm at home).

Still puzzled...

Martin

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Posted by lionelsoni on Tuesday, January 9, 2007 12:20 PM

I was hoping to get a response from Martin (Dampfmann) before diagnosing this; but he seems to be gone.  If Marty is right, this would be an example of the sort of bad stuff that happens with that kind of operation, against which I preach all the time.

If one is adding bridge rectifiers to lighted cars, I recommend also putting in an electrolytic capacitor to keep the voltage up over any interruptions that do occur.  In fact, I find that only one pickup works pretty well with a rectifier and a capacitor and have removed pickups to reduce the drag on some of my cars, although there is some chance of a car's lights going out when the train stops.

Bob Nelson

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Posted by ADCX Rob on Tuesday, January 9, 2007 11:55 AM
 MartyE wrote:

Are you crossing between 2 blocks that maybe out of pase or not evenly powered?

Marty has hit it exactly on this one.  In order to eliminate bulb flickering, the pickups on the PE cars are connected, and are of a small gauge spec'd for the bulbs only, not the loco, the other cars, and all of the accessories & switches using track power, which is what is happening when the trainset traverses blocks set at different voltages.

The easy fix is to install a tiny full-wave bridge(less than 1 amp is fine) powered by each pickup & ground on the AC side, or 2 per car, and tie together the "+" outputs to each other, and the "-" outputs to each other, effectively running the lights on the DC outputs & blocking any back-feeding of current from one truck to the other.

Single diodes in-line with the center rail pickups will work too, for half-wave current to the lights.  This is probably what Lionel should have done had they considered this possibility.

Rob

Rob

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Posted by MartyE on Tuesday, January 9, 2007 11:12 AM

I would suggest this is an isolated incident.  I have the PE cars and run them heavily during the holidays and haven't had an issue nor have I heard of this before in the 3 years they have been out on any of the boards. 

Any more details you could give us?   Are you crossing between 2 blocks that maybe out of pase or not evenly powered?

Trying to update my avatar since 2020 Laugh

MartyE and Kodi the Husky Dog! ( 3/31/90-9/28/04 ) www.MartyE.com My O Gauge Web Page and Home of Kodiak Junction!

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Posted by phillyreading on Tuesday, January 9, 2007 10:59 AM

Sign - Welcome [#welcome] Dampfman,

If the passenger cars are new I would suggest getting in touch with the warrenty department and asking for help!

The problem may be that the manufaturer used a very small wire that can not take the current draw for the light bulbs, try replacing the wire with a larger size wire and that should help with heating up. Reason for using a small wire is production cost per hundred units sold, if they can save 30 cents a car times 1000 that is about $300.00 savings to the manufacturer, that is done in automotive assembly lines here in the U.S.

Lee F.

Interested in southest Pennsylvania railroads; Reading & Northern, Reading Company, Reading Lines, Philadelphia & Reading.
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Posted by EIS2 on Monday, January 8, 2007 4:25 PM

Are the circuit breakers tripping on the power supplies?  Do the lights in the coaches ever actually light?  Make sure the lights are actually in the circuit.  You could also remove the bulbs and see if the wires still get hot.  If they do, that would suggest a short or a mis-wired coach.

Earl

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Posted by CSXect on Monday, January 8, 2007 3:07 PM
You are drawing too much power(watts) through those wires so there must be an electrical problem some where. A transformer will only supply the amout of power to overcome the "load" being put on it. Eral may have hit the nail on the head, Is it all of the cars or just one? There must be a lot of current flowing through the wire Current(I)x Voltage(V) equals watts which produces heat. Like Eral said the may be a short(high resistance short or intermitent short) in the cars. Is there any circuit boards or is it just a bulb in the cars?
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Posted by EIS2 on Monday, January 8, 2007 2:59 PM

The problem must be in the coaches because if you were supplying enough voltage to melt the wires under normal circumstances, the engine would be flying off the track.  I would look for a pinched wire somewhere or some other form of short.

Earl

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Posted by Dampfmann on Monday, January 8, 2007 1:27 PM

I'll be able to accurately answer this question and describe the pick-ups when I get home.  Heck, I might even try to post a picture or two.  You gotta try sometime...

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Posted by lionelsoni on Monday, January 8, 2007 12:40 PM
How many pickups does each car have, both the new ones with the problem and the old ones without the problem?

Bob Nelson

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    January 2007
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Problem with Polar Express Coaches
Posted by Dampfmann on Monday, January 8, 2007 12:26 PM

I am experiencing a problem with my Polar Express coaches.  The wires leading into the carbody from the electrical pick-ups continue to melt.  They get hot enough to melt the insulation on the wires and any plastic parts they come into contact with.  I have had this problem using two types of transformers: a ZW and the cheap one that comes with the RTR train sets.  I have used Fastrack and tubular track.

Before anyone tells me the problem must be with the transformers or the track, let me add one more bit of information to the puzzle-- I have not had this happen to any other, older Post-War lighted passenger cars. 

Has anyone else experienced this problem?  Could this be a mechanical/design defect with the coaches?  I am interested to hear your theories.

 

Sincerely,

Martin

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