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When I have read different articles on putting resister wheels sets in a cra it is usually recommended to put 2 wheels in them, one in each truck. Richard
.... I then cleaned the wheels with alcohol and ran them out and back around the layout (shockingly this is now an 11 scale mile round trip, counting the helix). Upon returning to the block, the cars were detected very reliably while rolling, but as soon as they were parked, the detection would fail. So mixed success so far. One of my intended applications is detection of occupied staging tracks with parked cars and no locos, so I hope this issue can be licked. I'll report back after some more experimentation.
I created a handful of resistor wheelsets with FVM wheels using shaved graphite (pencil lead) and acrylic paint. It's not a solution for every car ...Point is, either 10k is too high, which you can probably adjust sensitivity for on the rr circkits stuff at least, or there's something about the tread coating on the FVM resistor wheels that differs from previous runs of regular wheels. I did have to scratch away the coating on the ones I did where I applied the paint.
You seem to be familiar with electronics: did you happen to measure the resistance of your home-brew resistor wheels? Less than 10K?
Of course. I had to know if they would work. Duh. As I said, it was pretty difficult to get consistent results. If I recall, most of them came in between around 2k and 4k after I futzed with them enough. It was really difficult to get above 5k or so and actually still have a resistive connection. Sometimes I'd get nothin' (open circuit) and have to chip the paint off and try again. Sometimes they'd come in too low, e.g. under 500 ohms, in which case I worried about the heat dissipation and I'd redo those, too.What's much harder to know is how stable they've been over time. I figure if they heat up too much I'm much more likely to loose the connection entirely than to develop a less resistive short. But none of them have had more than a few hours run-time, so I can't tell you much about long-term reliability, except that as far as I know they all still work. I did about a dozen total. ...Point is, either 10k is too high, which you can probably adjust sensitivity for on the rr circkits stuff at least, or there's something about the tread coating on the FVM resistor wheels that differs from previous runs of regular wheels. I did have to scratch away the coating on the ones I did where I applied the paint.
I'll report back after some more experimentation.
I suspect that the layer of blackening might be causing the problem.
Guys, I'm not one with much electrical knowhow, so correct me if I'm wrong, but it shouldn't matter whether there is one wheelset or ten across the rails; current will flow through the path of least resistance and that's going to be close to 10K Ohms, no?.
Bingo! Good call peteski. (It really had to be that, but it's nice to see it verified.)I didn't have a wire wheel, but I did have an emory impregnated stone wheel for the Dremel and that worked like a champ: take a few quick passes on the tread while the wheel spins in the truck. It was amazing how much blackening there really was when you see the bare metal by comparison. I put the first car back on the track and I get 10K across the rails. The second car came in about the same, and the two together came in at 5K. Physics works, and so do these wheel sets!So polish the treads for the best reliability. As a fringe benefit, the polished treads look great!
That is not quite right Otto. If there are two paths of equal resistance (like two wheel sets) the current will split evenly between them and the effective resistance will be half of either path. Think of it like having two lanes available for traffic - half the resistance to traffic flow because the electrons (cars) naturally find the best lane.-gfh
The threads *look like* they are not blackened, but obviously there is some residue on them...Otto