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Vishay still has a few legacy ex-Sprague parts among their product offerings with 15V ratings.
Max, If I add more caps to power more coils with the same switch, I guess I should be, in effect, adding resistors in series to keep the peak current to about the same level, right? So, for a double crossover with 4 coils, the capacitor would be something like 4000 µF and the resistor would need to be more like 40 ohms and a higher watt rating, too, right? I am thinking just size the resistor for the 4 capacitors, whatever they turn out to be, and use that for any lesser number of capacitors, too. I am thinking that the capacitor(s) would still recharge plenty fast enough, especially if they are a bit oversized for the coil current requirement.Additional thoughts?
Thanks Max! I'll use that calculator a lot.Recharge times look inconsequential at that level.
As I posted before, I tried wall warts with lower nominal voltage ratings, and they would not throw all 4 of the solenoids on the Kato double cross over. Another somewhat odd observation was that sequential throwing of the turnout when it was getting marginal amounts of power showed that it was getting less effective with additional throws. That is, it might throw 3 of the 4 all of the way and not get the 4th point all the way across on the first attempt, and on subsequent attempts, it would get to the situation where the 4th point didn't move and the 3rd didn't get all the way across. I am suspecting the solenoids got warm and had higher electrical resistance, but it might also have been an issue with the various power supplies I was trying. But, this nominally 14.5 VDC 800 mA wall wart reliably throws all the points of the double crossover back and forth a few times at least without issue.
Since we are talking about the way that wall wart works, I will add that the AC reading has a repetitive set of reading jumps that I don't understand. It mostly reads a steady 2.05 volts, but suddenly jumps to 19.something and quickly goes back to 2.05 volts, then goes to 100.0 volts with the "1" flashing and a beeping sound, then quickly back to 2.05 volts again. This repeats with what seems to be a steady frequency. The only load when doing this is the little Radio Shack digital multimeter. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ I don't think I really need to understand that, but I'm throwing it out there to see if it rings any bells on your end.