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Those locos are one of the last ones made utilizing lead or lead alloy for the chassis. That is why the metal is so soft and the extra mass gives them good pulling ability.As far as the inexpensive tantalum capacitors go, I highly recommend giving them a "burn in" before installing them in a model. Basically hook them up to a source of DC voltage (of roughly 80% of their rated voltage) for few hours (make sure the polarity is correct) because they probably aren't screened during manufacturing. That should weed out any bad apples and greatly reduce the risk of flaming caps inside your model. I have a variable voltage power supply for that. But I guess in a pinch pair of series-connected 9V batteries should do the trick (18V total). Do not use a standard model train throttle. The peak-to-peak ripple of the unfiltered DC on the output will most likely be exceeding the cap's voltage rating. And the rheostat (speed control) will not reduce the voltage since there is no load on the output (the cap creates momentary load when charging then it doesn't consume any current.
Pete, I don't care what others say about you. I like you and you always have some useful tip on electronics (and almost everything else for that matter)ThanksJbub
(Attachment Link) Peteski, great idea. Could possibly use a charged up 18v power tool battery. I will give this a go.SteveI just did as per photo. Would a 2 hours be enough?
Peteski, you are a life saver. I just hooked up seven of my Chinese non branded 220uF 25v caps in parallel and applied the 18v battery.Three of them blew up immediately. The rest are ok after two hours. So, if anyone wants to try these caps beware.Steve