0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Okay, I see now. Well, that could be the speet pot, the direction switch, or both, sounds like to me.I think those "Allen" screws on that thing have the security nub in the center, so you might have to do what I've done with those - You can drill out the center pin and then try an Allen wrench in there, but it's easier to just use a Dremel cut-offdisk to slice a slot right across the head of the thing and unscrew it with a flat-blade screwdriver, and then replace them all with regular screws when you put it back together.
I've been a big fan of the Varipulse throttles.http://www3.sympatico.ca/kstapleton3/Index.html
I have two of his supplies built into one unit. A dual cab version, one with a wired remote hand held controller. It needs a good source of 12vdc of which I bought two supplies and removed the upper half of the enclosure to save space, but mostly aid in cooling.The entire enclosure does have a exhaust fan and it also has a volt & amp meter for the non-tethered throttle.The case use to hold two old school very heavy xformers which turned it into a huge paper weight and power hog. It used as much electricity at idle as it did running trains so I looked to upgrade. His PCB's at mounted at the rear each side of the fan. The (formerly) enclosed PS's are stacked and cable tied at the bottom. The intake vent holes are on the bottom.
Good point Max. PWM type of voltage regulation/control is very efficient, with very little heat dissipating on the output transistors. That is why DCC decoders use PWM for motor control.Might be one of those "belt and suspenders" things where a bit of over-engineering won't hurt.
The ironic thing is that that board has a full-wave bridge rectifier and an LM-type voltage regulator on it.Depending on what your input voltage is, and your current draw, you will get some serious heat off those, and they are notattached to the heat sink!