I have two questions.
1. I have built the Walthers ADM Grain elevator kit (minus half of the roof of the head house). I intend to put a lighting strip into the head house. What would be the best brand of light strip to put in such a building?
2. What is the best type of plug to use to connect the lights as this will be on a modular layout, and the buildings are going on a removable, separately transported tray? The buildings will be connected to a +12V DC bus, with a common ground.
Phone plugs are the most durable. Most of them do short momentarily as you plug and unplug them, so make sure your power supply is protected by something other than a fast blow fuse, or even worse, the fusible link inside a wall wart. There may be non-shorting types available. Or just make sure the power is always off when adding or removing buildings. For more than one circuit in a building, the stereo type gives you 2 circuits plus the ground. Another rugged option is a 5 or 7 pin DIN connector, which also gets you more circuits and no shorting. The advantage of these types of plus if that the socket part can be mounted solidly in the benchwork so you can lift the structure with one hand and pull the plug with the other. Other types of miniture connectors often don't have a panel mount jack option, so yuou need to hold the building plus have two hands to unplug. Not bad if you are some sort of mutant with extra hands.
--Randy
Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's
Visit my web site at www.readingeastpenn.com for construction updates, DCC Info, and more.
I tend to use a pair of wire nuts. Cheap, reuseable, and portable.
Mike Lehman
Urbana, IL
Randy,
A stereo plug might work, but Im really only using 1 circuit. No reason to have multiple circuits as I plan to use LEDs and the DC bus on our club layout is rated for several amps.
Mike,
Wire nuts unfortunately do not meet my clubs wiring standards. All connections are soldered or a locking plug (between modules). Connections on my own modules may be of any type.
Mel,
Bulbs are out for me. I need a long lasting light source with very low current draw. I should have previously mentioned that I intend to use commercially available plugs vice manufacturing my own.
These work pretty well.
Or
Jim
BMMECNYC Mel, Bulbs are out for me. I need a long lasting light source with very low current draw. I should have previously mentioned that I intend to use commercially available plugs vice manufacturing my own.
We must have gone to the same school....I started just a yr before You, but have the same way of doing things You do. The joy of it all...it's simple and it works.
Take Care!
Frank
Btw: All the buildings and vehicles are removable and have first floor interiors. Some have LED and incandesants in the same building, running off the same circuit, so only two wires are needed.
For one circuit, stereo plugs can eliminate the short - use the tip and the top ring, leve the middle ring unconnected, and you won;t get a short plugging them in or pulling them out.
Multiple circuits in one building can be useful though - for a business that isn;t 24 hours, you could have one circuit light up the whole thing, and a second circuit light just one or two little lights for security lights. Or in a house, you could have lights follow some sort of a pattern - at dusk the lights go on downstairs, later on lights go on upstairs, and the downstairs ones turn off. All sorts of possibilities.
I suppose this could be individually programmed in each structure with a small microcontroller, then only 1 circuit feeding the building would be neded and the micro would turn groups of leds on and off. Hmm... now this has me thinking..
Beautiful work! Would sure like to see more of your night scenes.
mlehman Mel, Beautiful work! Would sure like to see more of your night scenes.
I use mini-connectors from Micro-Mark in my buildings and flats. By using the same connectors, I can move buildings from place to place and the connections are interchangeable.
http://www.micromark.com/mini-connector-kit-pkg-of-10,8839.html