Just as a footnote to my previous posts of yesterday, and to show how handy photos can be, it was only later on examining the accompanying photos that I realised I’d got the adjoining gantry sections on the first photo the wrong way round (the ‘X’ should be on the middle ), and in the second, the two signals on the right of the picture should be the other way around (the three aspect should be to the outer and vice versa……). A further visit to the workshop in the wind, rain and darkness before bobos last night saw me sawing up the gantry frame once more and replacing the two with a three. The idea was to have a 3 aspect for trains arriving to show them availability of the platform on the diverging side, if that makes sense? Me just trying to be clever….I know very little if anything about signalling. Unfortunately, I couldn’t just swap the signals round as drastic action has to be taken to accommodate the three ways ie the cross member has to be cut and filed away for access to the middle light, so,I just added another:
Why I am boring you all with this?
Well, just to show as an example of how tiredness and too long at the bench can result in errors.
I enjoyed a full day’s modelling yesterday, and to make the most of it, I started in darkness. ‘But I thought the gantry kit didn’t arrive until the afternoon post?’. It didn’t.
I started the day determined to try and convert those Dublo double signals to led.
I’d grown fond of their vintage look, but the ‘trout-pouted’ look of the pokey-out lamps of old, akin to the average driver of many SUVs these days, just had to go!
But what a struggle it turned out to be (unnecessarily de-wiring then realising it wasn’t necessary, the idea being to secrete the ugly wires at the rear inside the housing of the lamps). But it just wasn’t to be, even though those mummified wires are the thinnest I’ve ever seen. Then I tried scraping the paint off the insides of the hoods to solder the cathodes to, but the solder broke off (I later realised that the white metal required a different solder, which thankfully I had - but wasn’t required as the meter showed a contact). Still, for belt and braces, I took a wire from the cathodes amd routed it out from the inside (this was possible as I used a single strand of wire for the purpose). Carefully threading through the base and nestling it in amongst the other wires down the stacmchion, blu-tac assistance, and attaching a resistor betwthe wire and the connection on the base, after several gos of attaching the rear of the hood and then undoing it, the lights eventually worked!
Then I repeated the proceed procedure for the second set on the stanchion. Despite using a double resistor in parallel, there was no joy from either set, despite the meter showing good connections, so I fitted a separate resistor to the second wire, and bingo, they all worked. But after putting it all back together, and reapplying the feed, there was nothing.
No amount of fiddling after this could rectify matters.
My knowledge amd patience deserted me, and the gloom of failure once more descended…..
I didn’t take a picture of the base electrics, but to give an idea of how the wires are routed in these signals, here’s a piccie from earlier in the week:
Anyway, I submit in an attempt to justify my lack of concentration and it’s consequences.
Back to grand parenting duties today and tonight which will come as a welcome distraction……
Hopefully I’ll return with a finished and working gantry.
Wish me luck.
Thanks all for your interest and likes and also your endurance.
jonte