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Many moons ago, somebody used to post (on the old Atlas forum) a clever trick for controllingturnouts that involved putting a capacitor and LED in series with the turnout motor (I think these were for a Tortoise, but I am not sure about that). As I recall, it relied on the fact thatwhen you flipped the toggle, initially, the capacitor was a dead short so current flowed and the switch machinemoved, but then the capacitor charged up, shutting OFF the switch machine and somehow lighting an LEDto indicate the direction.And I think the guy who used to post it named the idea according to his 3 initials, the first of which was a "G".Okay, that's a rambling mess, but that's all I can remember about it. Does anybody remember this circuit?
I don't see it working the same with the Tortoise motor, as it takes too long to move.
Correct. The BCD circuit won't work on a Tortoise. It's based on charging a capacitor and discharging through the turnout coil in a pulse that dissipates making a momentary contact. It won't work long enough for a Tortoise.
Another option is feeding power to both outside pins (1 and on the Tortoise through 555k resistors. Then just ground pin 1 or 8 to move it the direction you want it to go. We use this with a "switch key" on Modutrak so that we don't have live buttons. The key is just a shorted out RCA plug.
The other one that was discuss often was the super secret BCD setup for Kato Unitrack switched. It was G. R. Stilwell that had it and you had to message him to get a PDF with the details. He passed a number of years ago and the method became more public.It's nothing spectacular, pretty much anyone that understands RC circuits would have figured it out. I never understood why all the secrecy.
I think this is the same guy we're talking about here, but I think he was convinced that Kato was going to pay him big dollars for his circuit to add LED's to their turnouts.I'll admit I'm fairly surprised that Kato hasn't put decoders into their Unitrack turnouts by now. That was my argument to him back then (15 years ago probably?) is that Kato would probably skip right to decoders that may or may not have features like LED's, Local pushbutton controls, etc.
555,000 ohms?! That would not supply even fraction of current needed to run the Tortoise motor. 5.5k (5,500 ohm) might be low enough for that.Regardless, Max seems to be interested in connecting indicator LEDs into the motor circuit.
Sorry, I fixed it. I remembered red/red/red on the color bands but not the right value calculation! 2.2K is more better.
Stillwell! BCD! THAT'S IT!No, I am not especially interested in the LED indication.
Stillwell! BCD! THAT'S IT!No, I am not especially interested in the LED indication. What I remembered was that it could be a way to kick aLATCHING relay one way or the other with a toggle switch, but not have to keep the latching coil energized permanentlyafter flipping it. i.e. You flip it, the current pulse fires the latching relay, the capacitor charges up, the current shuts off,and you are done. Flip the toggle the other way, the same thing happens.Okay.. who has the Stillwell circuit info??? That's what I'm looking for.