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traffic lights

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  • Member since
    December 2011
  • 55 posts
traffic lights
Posted by wirta1 on Friday, February 1, 2013 4:23 PM

i was installing some traffic lights on my layout and was wondering if there is some device that would change the lights automatically so i would not have to change them by hand.

  • Member since
    January 2007
  • From: Eastern Shore Virginia
  • 3,290 posts
Posted by gandydancer19 on Friday, February 1, 2013 6:44 PM

Walthers makes a traffic light controller.

Elmer.

The above is my opinion, from an active and experienced Model Railroader in N scale and HO since 1961.

(Modeling Freelance, Eastern US, HO scale, in 1962, with NCE DCC for locomotive control and a stand alone LocoNet for block detection and signals.) http://waynes-trains.com/ at home, and N scale at the Club.

  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: Sierra Vista, Arizona
  • 13,757 posts
Posted by cacole on Friday, February 1, 2013 7:00 PM

I use a traffic light controller from a Vellmann kit, made in Belgium and sold by All Electronics as their catalog number MK-131, priced at $9.00 each.

I simply traced the wiring and soldered leads to the board instead of the kit's 5mm LEDs.

http://www.allelectronics.com/make-a-store/item/MK-131/TRAFFIC-LED-LIGHT-KIT/1.html

  • Member since
    December 2007
  • 993 posts
Posted by hobo9941 on Friday, February 1, 2013 10:13 PM

I have the Walthers traffic light controller, and it's pretty neat. It cycles the lights, just like the real thing. There is even the short pause, where the lights are red both ways for a second, before it turns green for the other direction.

  • Member since
    October 2002
  • From: Columbus, OH
  • 492 posts
Posted by dano99a on Thursday, February 7, 2013 2:06 PM

If your using DCC, namely Digitrax, and have an older computer laying around that you don't use you can get the components needed to change the lights based on block occupancy . It takes the following:

Digitrax BD4 or BDL16 (occupancy detectors, 4 blocks or 16)

Digitrax SEC8 (Signal decoders, this is what drives and powers the lights)

Digitrax PR3 (USB interface for your PC)

Layout software like JMRI for a mac, I know there are PC versions out there too. (This provides the logic behind when to change the luights to red/yellow/green based on occupancy)

It's not cheap to do, I will be honest, but if you can afford it and have the time to connect it all up, it totally automates it so all you have to do from there is just focus on running your trains..  :)

DANO
C&O lives on!!!  
Visit my railfan community site: http://www.crtraincrew.com

  • Member since
    December 2004
  • From: Bedford, MA, USA
  • 21,481 posts
Posted by MisterBeasley on Thursday, February 7, 2013 2:43 PM

I use the Walthers controller with the Walthers lights.  The controller is on sale right now at Walthers.  Save 12 bucks!

What kind of traffic lights are you using?  After buying the Walthers ones, I bought a controller (FK148) from Bakatronics.  The Walthers traffic lights bring down 4 wires for each face on the single-face and double-face lights, and I'd assume just two sets of wires for the 4-face model.  So, there's one for each color and a single common wire for the face.  These are LEDs, so polarity is important, and that's why the Bakatronics unit didn't work for me.  Their circuit uses a common cathode, and the Walthers lights are common anode, so they wouldn't work together.  So, I bought the Walthers controller, and I'm very happy with it.

The Walthers controller is advertised to run 2 intersections, which I interpret as 8 faces.  On my layout, the traffic lights control 3-way intersections, not 4, so I've got 3 intersections running for a total of 9 faces.  So far, so good, but if I were to add another controlled intersection I'd need another unit.

It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse. 

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