I'm thinking of restoring the smoke unit for an NS caboose 6-19711. It had a metal tube with a really thin resistance element inside. I think it was around 65 ohms which would dissipate in command mode, 18 vrms, about 5 watts. That's a bunch. It was probably "designed" for conventional and I figure around maybe 12 vrms max giving a power dissipation of about 2.2 watts. Seems reasonable. I know that fan driven smoke units would be really best. I debated just eliminating the smoke unit but thought better of it. Why not restore something to better than it was. And no parts were available on this smoke resistor unit.
I think I will just restore the smoke unit to sort of stock but for command, with a tiny switch underneath, and let it go at that.
Any thoughts about the power? I think a skinny 68 ohm resistor and a diode in series would be just about right. There was no packing in this vertical tube. Just a vertical resistor stick and an epoxy sealed bottom where the wires came out so the fluid would just pool around the resistor and hopefully drift upward.
Any thoughts?