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On our layout we prefer the semi scale railking cars. Most of the time we have been pulling them with the traditional sized lionel cars. Im wanting to expand our options on engines and would like to try out some mth railking units. One thing I notice it that none of the the non powered a or b units have smoke. Is there an easy way to add smoke to the b units and non powered A units and if so would I still be able to control the volume of smoke like I can with the powered a unit? Im assuming the shells are identical on the A units so It would just be a matter of purchaseing the smoke unit and mounting bracket.

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From the other post it looks like a tether is the way to go. With that in mind, after reading this post in the other thread:

 

Originally Posted by stan2004:

I think John is on the right track.  It seems the simplest solution is to tether something from an A unit.  The trick is to define "something."  In the DCS smoke units  the smoke volume changes proportional to what the engine is doing as well as to what the smoke level is set at (low, medium or high).  So if going for more than an on/off relay of the main unit, you'd electrically buffer the pulses from the main smoke heater and smoke fan and duplicate them back in the dummy so as not to overload the smoke electronics in the A unit.  All this can get complicated though not particularly expensive - maybe $5-10 in parts plus the smoke unit. 

 If my b unit has pickups for lights, how or what do i need to "electrically buffer the pulses" ? As gunrunnerjohn mentioned in the other thread the control boards are rated for 4amp, If i run it on medium output I cant see pulling too much juice. Plus arent these boards designed for two smoke units for the larger engines or are there single smoke unit boards only.

Yes, "same" main board drives 1 or 2 smoke units.  The slave board that GGG refers to has a 10-pin tether from the main A unit but this also has motor drive and light signals in addition to smoke.  What was proposed in the other thread, but was not confirmed by anyone who actually did it (as far as I can tell), is to run just the 4 smoke wires (2 heater, 2 fan) to a trailing A or B smoke unit.

 

The slave unit board which uses local track pickups buffers the heater signal from the main unit with a simple FET driver circuit (I'd guess a couple bucks of parts).  I don't know if anyone has published or tried to roll-your-own smoke buffer circuit.  In any event the buffer allows the "high" smoke currents to flow locally rather than over the tether.  One can debate the merits of the two approaches. 

 

My observation was that whether you go with the slave board with 10-pin tether or try to roll-your-own subset with or without buffer, that there ought to be some connectors, harnesses, or whatever from a dual-smoke main A unit that you might want to look into.

G, what do you mean by "independent control"?  If we're talking about the same slave board, the power level to the slave smoke unit mimics whatever is going on with the main smoke unit.

 

Do you know if anyone has actually implemented a 2nd smoke unit across a 4-wire tether?  That is, where the "high" current pulsed electrical signals run a physically longer distance than between 2 smoke units within the same main A unit.

Whats the cost of a slave board? I could see where both options could be useful. Especially in a situation where more than two smokes units would be useful like an ABA configuration. In most of the engines i would be doing this do they have diaphragms between the engines so the wire wouldnt be visible hardly at all.

Originally Posted by stan2004:

The concern is why does the MTH slave board then have a buffer which adds cost.  Perhaps, to your point, a 10-wire tether would get rather thick and stiff if many of its wires needed to carry high current smoke and motor signals. That is, buffering allows smaller gauge wires in the tether.

Stan, What do you mean by buffering?  Are you taking about the 74HCT that control the FETs?  I thought they helped buffer the processor.  For the slave I was thinking the board is just measuring the output, and using it to control the slave boards own generated voltage.  Granted I have not studies the slave board to the same degree as the PS-2 boards.  Usually slaves come in for A motor FET repair only, so I figured out how to take measurements to determine which one is bad.

 

Internally to the A unit the wiring to the smoke unit is only 28 gauge.   So other than the extra distance the wire gauge is probably the same.  If a PS-1 harness was used the wire might be 22 or 24.

 

The smoke unit is about a .5 to .7 amp load on the Z-4000 meter when turned on in conventional.   G

Originally Posted by GGG:

Stan, What do you mean by buffering?  Are you taking about the 74HCT that control the FETs?  I thought they helped buffer the processor.  For the slave I was thinking the board is just measuring the output, and using it to control the slave boards own generated voltage.  Granted I have not studies the slave board to the same degree as the PS-2 boards.  Usually slaves come in for A motor FET repair only, so I figured out how to take measurements to determine which one is bad.

 

...

 

The smoke unit is about a .5 to .7 amp load on the Z-4000 meter when turned on in conventional.   G

I don't have one in front of me to photograph, but the slave unit I saw had a FET driver buffer on the board itself (in addition to the HCT logic gate buffer).  The slave's smoke unit is therefore pulsing (PWM) in sync with the main smoke unit pulses...except only low-current pulses are going over the tether.  The high-current supply is generated locally from the slave's own roller pick-ups/wheels; the slave board FET switches this supply voltage.

 

Although the current may only jump up 0.5 (or whatever) when you turn smoke on, as you know the low resistance smoke heaters are being pulsed using the Positive Supply voltage which can be, say, 18V.  So the pulsed current magnitude is V/R which is measured in Amps...understood about the average Amps which is relevant to wire-heating or gauge selection at these modest frequencies.

I found this posted photo of the slave board I'm thinking of in this thread:

 

https://ogrforum.com/t...or-mth-proto-diesels

 

 

ogr diesel slave smoke

There's the FET going to pin-3 of the 4-pin smoke unit so that's what tells me the smoke control pulses from the main unit tether are being buffered locally on the slave board.  I think it would be a serious undertaking to reverse-engineer the smoke-only portion of this board. It would take some thought but perhaps since we know 2 smoke units can be driven by one set of electronics, perhaps the 2 unpowered units in an ABA would only need one set of smoke electronics if that makes sense.

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  • ogr diesel slave smoke
Originally Posted by stan2004:
Originally Posted by GGG:

Stan, What do you mean by buffering?  Are you taking about the 74HCT that control the FETs?  I thought they helped buffer the processor.  For the slave I was thinking the board is just measuring the output, and using it to control the slave boards own generated voltage.  Granted I have not studies the slave board to the same degree as the PS-2 boards.  Usually slaves come in for A motor FET repair only, so I figured out how to take measurements to determine which one is bad.

 

...

 

The smoke unit is about a .5 to .7 amp load on the Z-4000 meter when turned on in conventional.   G

I don't have one in front of me to photograph, but the slave unit I saw had a FET driver buffer on the board itself (in addition to the HCT logic gate buffer).  The slave's smoke unit is therefore pulsing (PWM) in sync with the main smoke unit pulses...except only low-current pulses are going over the tether.  The high-current supply is generated locally from the slave's own roller pick-ups/wheels; the slave board FET switches this supply voltage.

 

Although the current may only jump up 0.5 (or whatever) when you turn smoke on, as you know the low resistance smoke heaters are being pulsed using the Positive Supply voltage which can be, say, 18V.  So the pulsed current magnitude is V/R which is measured in Amps...understood about the average Amps which is relevant to wire-heating or gauge selection at these modest frequencies.

Stan,  The Lead PS-2 produces about 25VDC as Positive Voltage when the track voltage is 18VAC.  The Rectified AC is boosted via inductor and capacitor from what I have seen.

This voltage is sitting on the motor, heater element and lights.  It is also sent over the harness to the slave.  The motor leads also go over so the motor leads provide another source of PV for the slave.  The rest of the leads are the accessory returns and the PCB DC Ground.  I believe the slave produces it's own 5VDC for the fan and LEDs, another DC Source to run the microchips, and then it's own motor current.

 

Since the slave is only seeing the FETs return signal pulse to DC ground I am not sure any current flows?

 

Since we don't know the PWM for the heater we don't know the effective Voltage seen by the element.  We know lights are about 6V so the heater can be down that low also.  I have watched the bulb intensity on board tester and it is a 6V bulb so that may be a hint.  The program definitely varies the intensity of smoke heat depending on what the engine is doing. (Boost the heat at first motion then drops off.

 

So any way I think the current draw for the elements is probably under an amp, the fan takes less than .1A on the 1 amp 5VDC regulator.  So I still think the harness can take the current flow to run the remote smoke unit just like a larger Diesel or Gas Turbine that has 2 smoke units.  G

Got it, I missed that we went from 2 smoke unit up to 3.  I would still try the harness method but remove one heat element from each dummy smoke unit so they go from 8 ohm effective to 16 ohms each.  Now the 2 dummy smoke units would be the equivalent load of one normal unit on the PV.  Of course you pick up one more fan motor load on the 5VDC circuit.

 

Or you add the slave to the B, and then tether it to Dummy Trail A.  Now the PS-2 board carries one smoke unit and the Slave carries 2.  G

Last edited by GGG

I think though at a price stand point by the time i buy a smoke unit and a slave control board to safely run a third unit I would be better off just buying a powered unit and running it as a lash-up. Yes I would have to independantly control the smoke but only when changing the levels. Plus I would have the dummy unit to sell to finance the powered unit. As far as my question abour running the slave unit in the above post I just wanted to make sure it was safe to just run a tether alone vs running a tether with a slave board. Thanks all for your help and I think i have a game plan. Have a tethered A-B unit with a "lash-up" to another indepentant powered A, this should give me what Im looking for.

One could always power a small digital relay via the heater wires and have the output complete a circuit to power the heaters. But it would need it's own power supply via the rail pickups which would have to be added and power routed thru a bridge rectifier into say a buck convertor...Only drawback is you'd lose the low, med & high smoke heat settings but the fan would still be powered via the PS2 main board.

Could possibly power 2 or 3 smoke units this way...would depend on the buck convertors capacity...Just a thought.

Still though looking at the secondary market like the classifieds here or ebay, a lightly used or new railking engine only brings 150-200$. I would probably be better served just buying a completely seperate unit. The tether option on contrast is maybe less than 75$ in parts if you include the price of the smoke unit. Plus wouldnt I still need to buy the smoke unit when doing the ps2 upgrade? I could see maybe going the ps2 upgrade option on a premier engine where the engines are substantially more expensive.

Would like some information, as I have tried to discern the above, and well

 

I have a 30-4144, mth, with a tether running back to the lighted second "A",

unit,   I would like to add a smoke unit to this 2nd " A".  Will the PS/2 board in the

primary "A", unit, function, and allow the 2nd smoke unit to work, and not blow up the main board.  It seems like I am seeing that style of info above, but would like to confirm

that information.

If it has the 3V PS/2 boards, there's no problem running two smoke units.  If it has the 5V PS/2 boards, the answer is maybe.  There is a mod to allow them to run two smoke units, I don't know when it was incorporated into production.  That set was 2005, which should make it a 3V board, but the sound file looks like a 5V sound file, so I'm not sure.

 

Thanks John,  I 'll go and check out the charge port, 

 

GGG,  I know that you repair stuff, BUT , if that number is located

somewhere, and this may seal the deal,  can you get me a picture, of where

to Look.  I dont mind taking shell off  Front "A",  THANKS

 

EDIT:   It is Square, guess I can try it , if I can figure out what to mount it

          on !!!

Last edited by arrsd90
Originally Posted by arrsd90:

 

Thanks John,  I 'll go and check out the charge port, 

 

GGG,  I know that you repair stuff, BUT , if that number is located

somewhere, and this may seal the deal,  can you get me a picture, of where

to Look.  I dont mind taking shell off  Front "A",  THANKS

 

EDIT:   It is Square, guess I can try it , if I can figure out what to mount it

          on !!!


To help with location that is on the bottom side of the board, usually faces up in a tender or diesel.  The 4 pin smoke connector would be directly under the location.   G

If indeed you have a PS2 5V board and can access it, here's a photo with the two FET devices GRJ identified circled.  This pic shows the one-smoker version (352A marking upside down in photo, small FET marked SS, large FET marked 3055L).  The BSH101 appears to be obsolete while the IRLL2705 is 93 cents at Digikey.  If you choose to attempt the mod and can't find a BSH101 and the MTH techs don't have a replacement, I'll find a Digikey alternative for you.

 

Photo revised per GGG correction below.

 

ogr 5v smoke fets revised

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  • ogr 5v smoke fets revised
Last edited by stan2004

Thanks everybody,

Box Car Bill, sent a note about a
Conv, Lionel, Loco,   I do have 1 and I think since this is

numero uno, I might go that route, ( JUST, in case, I screw up)

&  after I have learned

with the Information, from you folks, (and it is appreciated)

I will try my hands, with the MTH,  1st thing, probably getting a

MTH, Unit !!

Stan, You circled the wrong component.  307 is below it.  The BSH101 is now a FDN 5630.  Not sure why 307 component is changed, I thought it was a BSH101.  It is the fan motor run FET.  The FDN5630 is what is used on the 3V board and is the replacement to fix failed FETs on the 5V for lights and couplers.  G

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