0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Do you mean the lights themselves, the driver circuits, or all of the above?
The best way to model them is to run fiber optics though the model and glue to clear styrene the shape of the bar. Use adhesive foil on top and bottom to direct the light outwards.
IronPenguin is alive and well.Had to switch providers. Still providing light boards.Mike (IronPenguin) Tennent
What type of lights are you taking about? A full LED light bar? A strobe bar? V5 wigwags (like the NYPD). Michigan SP top hats?Lights are very era specific and you will need to find the correct FX drivers for what you want to model. There are currently no true scale light bars in N. The best way to model them is to run fiber optics though the model and glue to clear styrene the shape of the bar. Use adhesive foil on top and bottom to direct the light outwards.
Current website? Google directs me to Lights4Models?
A final thought - a bigger problem than the LED size is the d***n wires! I've probably installed lights in 100 + cars in all scales and routing and hiding the wires is the absolutely hardest thing about it.
Try using #44 solenoid wire. Finer than hair, practically invisible, and easy to work with--assuming you use a delicate touch. One #80 drill hole will easily pass a dozen or more of these wires.
I'm quite familiar with magnet wire and occassionally use it, but it does have it's own set of problems. When I do a custom install, I have to keep in mind that the customer must be able to detach and re-attach all the wires from the effects boards. That means the wires can't be soldered to it. Magnet wire is very difficult to reliably attach (and re-attach) to most available connectors, so it makes more sense to use with that can be used with connectors. And that doesn't even address the problem of soldering magnet wire to picos and nanos in quantities I deal with. 🙂