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Amazing! I thought those circuits that put high frequency AC on the track for constant lighting had long since gone the way of the Dodo bird!
I was just speculating, but what else could keep the lights lit while the DC engine is not running?
Actually, constant lighting ("CL") power packs like the Tomix and newer Kato ones simply let one adjust the minimum width of the PWM pulses. You set it to a point where the LEDs come on, but the motor does not yet rotate. (Better yet, by turning the dial down to where the the motor stops turning but the LEDs stay on.) It's that simple, and not an injected or overlaid pulse like you may be used to with Model Railroader's old TAT or the Model Rectifier designs with "spike" pulses. Your train power is PWM pulses that are basically 0% wide (of the frequency cycle) when the throttle dial is "off", and pulses of 100% of the frequency cycle when the throttle dial is at maximum. The Tomix and Kato power pack PWM pulse amplitude is a safe 12 to 15 volts.Rich K.
I found a post and discussion on the azl forum. I think all that little tab and stop does is keep a low DC voltage on the rails so theDC LED headlights stay on. The post says they had some engines that unfortunately creep on that low "constant lighting" setting,so it's not high frequency AC. It's just "really low speed to light up the lights and hope the motor doesn't move".
Not sure if that's it. White LEDs need around 3V to glow. I'm fairly certain that any Z scale model's motor would run steadily at 3VDC.
Good point. Whatever it is, there are reports on Z forums (like AZL's and Marklin) about engines that either won't light from the constant lighting feature, or whose motors move from the lighting feature. I let my curiosity get the better of me on this, as I don't even have Z equipment, nor do I plan to, so I'll just shut up now. (I just want to put one of those Rokuhan controllers on a scope to see what the heck that lighting feature does!)
No worries. I don't expect anyone to send me one to check out. But I will say, I would not be doing any "tear down".I just want to put the output on an oscilloscope to see what sort of voltage it is putting out that the LEDssee, but motors do not. It could be something as simple as high frequency AC, like the old-school "lighting generator" circuitsused to use. But I was curious.
It runs off of 8 AAA batteries, can you get AC out of that?