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Rick, the capacitive discharge supply eliminates of all the worries you have. It will not burn out switch machines whether it supplies 12 or 16 or 18 volts. It will not burn out switch machines if the button sticks or is held too long.It only costs few dollars to build and it is not some complicated modern electronic wonder but a very basic circuit using same components which have been used since the infancy of electronics. Even someone who is all-thumbs when it comes to electronics can easily build one of those units.As far as your experience goes and the gospel you dispute (from others including Paul Graf from Atlas), there is validity to what they say. The higher voltage (supplied momentarily) provides stronger magnetic field to move the core inside the solenoid for reliable throwing. You might just have some really smooth throwing machines and you can get away using 12 volts, but like Paul said, they were designed to reliably throw at a higher voltage. Actually, the way I see it, the machines were originally designed to work with the voltage supplied by the accessory terminal of all the standard 12V power packs (which have been in use probably even before even you were born). Accessory terminals are normally powered directly from the secondary transformer winding which also (after being rectified) supplies the variable DC circuit. The secondary winding supplies between 16-20V to compensate for the losses caused by the rectifier needed to convert the AC to pulsing DC. Makes sense?
I use Peco train-diversion devices (I don't dare call them turnouts), and throw them manually. Haven't burned out a coil yet.
Why everyone is dissing on the military surplus that atlas sells is confusing me...
I think it mainly boils down to three things....While the Atlas switch machines may be no more prone to malfunction than any other switch machine, if they do malfunction they are very difficult to repair or replace, and generally it requires the replacement of the whole switch. (In fairness, this is true of any switch with a built-in switch machine, not just those from Atlas.)