I am getting ready to start wiring the layout and need to know what wire to get. I was looking at Lowes today and they had this CAD5 wire 24gauge at 1st was $35.00 for 100ft. 2nd was $25.00 for 100ft. and 3rd was $18.00 for 100ft. They also had the wire for your HVAC thermostat at $49.00 for 100ft. and it was 18 gauge. Looking at past posts on the OGR forum it has been suggested that 18, 22 and 24 gauge wire will work for wiring up the Tortoise switch machines. What should I get? Also I know that stranded wire is better than solid wire but all I can find in the smaller gauge is solid. Thank you for any help because I am no electronic wizard and I don't want to wire up these things and burn my parents house down. Take care and thanks for any help. Choo Choo Kenny
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Kenny, I used CAT5 to wire my Tortoises, love the stuff. You can run pretty long distances with it. I haven't checked for voltage drop, but they work so I'm happy. I picked up a 1000' spool at Menards for $75.
Well I am a dummy and was not thinking the farthest I will have to go is 30-35ft. from the control panel to the 1 switch motor on the back of the upper part of the layout. I forgot about length = power drop the farther you go away from the power supply. Choo Choo Kenny
There your answer right their below.
OGR forum it has been suggested that 18, 22 and 24 gauge wire will work for wiring up the Tortoise switch machines. What should I get? Also I know that stranded wire is better than solid wire but all I can find in the smaller gauge is solid.
It's your Call !
Good luck,John
Visit the website www.tektel.com . Look under tab for security wire 22 ga..They offer either 2 conductor or 4 conductor either solid or stranded in 500' or 1000' rolls packed in pullout box makes running wire easier. I use the solid wire and 66 style connector block for wiring switch motors. If you want standard telephony 4 pair wire no need for Cat 5 use Cat 3 with vinyl sheath not plenum sheath it is much cheaper and works the same. The 500' 4 conductor list for $29.50 per box or 1000' box for $46.50. The 2 conductor is slightly cheaper but I would use the 4 conductor leaving a pair spare that could be used to connect to the relay contacts to provide turnout indication for different applications if you needed. Visit my website www.montanarailpower.com and look at the different wiring configurations for tortoise switch motors under the wiring tab.
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I am trying to wire some dz-1000 switch machines to a aiu. Going to wire ten of them. I want to keep the wires color coded like the switch machine so I can trace them later if I have to. I assume I need 22 gauge. Not sure if I need stranded or solid. Thoughts? Also, is this available in any brick and mortar store? I can only find it online.
Thanks.
Stranded or solid wire makes no difference in the operation, that's strictly a personal choice.
With stranded wire I find that you need to keep the strands of wire very tight when installing it a switch terminal screw. Solid wire is very good, however if using a size over 16 gauge it may not bend that easy or return fully from a bend in the wire if you try to straighten it. Also I have found that stranded wire is not the easiest to attach to some screw connections.
What I have found is that with solid wire you can just bent it to the shape you want. With stranded wire you need to have more patience as sometimes the strands of wire may come undone from the twist you made, also stranded wire also needs to be watched more when attaching it to a screw.
Lee Fritz
Some things to consider:
Tortoise machines use a minimal amount of amperage, therefore any gauge around 24 will work fine.
Telephone wire used to be 22 gauge. Now it is 24 gauge. Cat5 is fine, but as the man said, Cat3 or even what we call "Cat nuthin" will work fine, too. Alarm and telephone installers often have short scraps to give away. The small gauge wire is not worth hoarding and selling to the metal salvage yard.
Stranded vs solid is not an issue at the voltages and frequencies that we use. Same gauge, same ampacity.
Here's my best answer to the loose strand syndrome: (write this on a Post-it note and refer to it often, but be aware that this is advice for right-handed people. Left-handed people do not suffer the escaping strand syndrome as much.)
When twisting stranded wire, twist it the "wrong" way, that is, against your natural tendency to twist it clockwise with your right hand, as you hold it with your left hand. Instead, hold it in your left hand, and twist the strands COUNTER CLOCKWISE. When you go to form a right-handed loop, and smush the strands under a screw head, the twists will tighten, rather than loosen. Magic!
The alternative is to have a small soldering iron idling at the train table, and form the loop, put a little solder on the strands, and they won't ever get loose.
Beware of "dry" crimp-on (as opposed to soldered) terminals. They are the first place that trouble will occur.
phillyreading posted:With stranded wire I find that you need to keep the strands of wire very tight when installing it a switch terminal screw. Solid wire is very good, however if using a size over 16 gauge it may not bend that easy or return fully from a bend in the wire if you try to straighten it. Also I have found that stranded wire is not the easiest to attach to some screw connections.
What I have found is that with solid wire you can just bent it to the shape you want. With stranded wire you need to have more patience as sometimes the strands of wire may come undone from the twist you made, also stranded wire also needs to be watched more when attaching it to a screw.
Lee Fritz
If you are using screw terminals, crimp a terminal onto the stranded wire or tin the end of the wire and bend it into a hook. I crimp a spade terminal onto stranded wire.
Not sure anyone has read the current requirements for Tortoise switch machines. They draw 15 ma when stalled and 4 ma when moving. Using 18 gauge for these machines is like using 00 wire to wire your track. 30 AWG would be more than adequate. Base your selection on what you plan to connect the auxillary terminals to. I think they are rated for less than 2 amps.
Pete
While smaller AWG can be used, I find it easier to work with 22 or 24 AWG wire, and the prices for AWG 22 and 24 are competitive enough with smaller gauges that cost is not a determining factor.
Thx all
Tom, I use #28 stranded for most of my light wiring in locomotives.
Arthur P. Bloom posted:Some things to consider:
... Beware of "dry" crimp-on (as opposed to soldered) terminals. They are the first place that trouble will occur.
if this is the case, you are either using the wrong tool or you're using the right tool the wrong way.
Tom Tee posted:
Tom, exceptionally nice wiring job. However if you are using the contacts on the Tortoise machines to power your three rail track you are probably exceeding the contact rating. The contacts were designed for indicator lights or maybe HO trains but not three rail O trains.
Pete
That's really neat... Are you guys Ex bell telephone installers?
Come over to three-rail Tom, much simpler.
Tom Tee posted:Thank you for the kind words.
I believe Arthur Bloom has a Bell background. He is really well versed. I always pay attention to his thoughts.
My wiring is based on disciplines in aircraft service and powerboat racing. And NO. The wiring steps I use in trains would not be sufficient for planes or high performance boats. That is where each wire has a code for
Wire terminals in anything that moves is required not to be soldered to lessen the chance of vibration causing the connection to break. All the cars in the world I think are only crimped connector pins. I remember a national presidential convention in the '60s maybe? where AMP? crimped every connector for the first time. A bold move back then and no failures.
So there you have it...
Points taken!
For a whole different perspective, I try to use wiring methods that use as few connectors/connections as possible. I like terminal blocks that accept wire ends directly, using a pressure plate or wire holder. It is still important to use the correct size wire, if you need to double it up or use other subterfuge you are on the wrong track. I try to avoid lugs, crimped or soldered.
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Billy, what difference does the total current draw make? You need two wires to each machine. Unless you want to have them all move simultaneously you only need to consider the current draw of an individual switch which is 15 ma. You only need to consider total current draw if you wire all your control switches from a single source which presumably is near your transformer/control panel.
Pete
Actually they are selling copper clad aluminum. Still less conductive than solid copper, but better than pure aluminum and can be soldered easily.
Tom Tee posted:
snip...
In my many years of servicing layouts I have found many faults involving failed crimp connections.
Yes the were not installed properly.
Yes the harness was not run safely.
Yes the owner did not use a proper crimping tool.
Yes that is real life.
snip...
You have explained very well why I do not like crimp connectors! This is exactly what I ran into in my working life on commercial systems (so nice to be retired!). I have found and fixed some of them and I imagine there are many more still out there causing intermittent problems somewhere. We used professional contractors for the installations with skilled employees.
I agree with PLCProf's and your later post about the terminal strips that accept the wires directly with no connectors involved. These are what I always try to use on my layout and other projects. The fewer connections the better and even better using no crimp connectors. The connectors would probably be just fine if everyone made them properly using the proper tools, but as you say, that doesn't always happen in real life.
The only place I used any crimp connectors on my layout were on some toggle switches. I had one bad connection that I had to repair and I definitely know better and was being very careful. I thought the switch was bad, but no, it was the crimp connector. Maybe the crimps and I are just jinxed when used together?
To another comment above, I worked in a few telephone buildings before they went to all computer run systems. The wiring they did in those was the best I have ever seen, just amazing. Tied the big cables down on the wire trays with string and they were perfectly stacked and aligned. It was just immaculate the craftsmanship they had back in the day. They had specifications for everything and how it should be done back then.
I was working in one about 1990 or so, they had already installed the computer systems and were tearing out all the old cables and relay switch gear. Sad to see all that beautiful work being disposed of. I often wondered what the folks tearing it out thought and if any of them had installed any of the original wiring that was done so neatly.
I like strained better than solid. If you accidentally cut into a solid copper and if the wires bends it could may break at that point.
I uses super flex stranded wire (90 to 120 strands) with a silicon jacket on all my restores. It cost more but is worth it.
As Gunnrunnerjohn states it is a personal choice.
Billy, The original poster asked what size wire to use with his Tortoise machines. The answer is a AWG to handle 15 ma. That is minimum size to run from each DPDT switch to each machine, period. (the correct answer BTW is 39 AWG). No one wants to work with wire that small but as some have stated above 28 AWG is more than enough.
How you wire from your power source to these DPDT switches is another question. If you have them all on a single buss then simply add up the current requirement. Maybe you have a large layout with multiple control panels with each panel controlling just few switches. Then its simply the total of each cluster.
No need to select a single wire size based on total number of switches.
BTW you can activate a switch then remove power and it will stay in position. Mine are only powered to move them. I have replaced the supplied .025" music wire with .040". The points stay in placed even unpowered.
Pete
Norton posted:Billy, The original poster asked what size wire to use with his Tortoise machines. The answer is a AWG to handle 15 ma. That is minimum size to run from each DPDT switch to each machine, period. (the correct answer BTW is 39 AWG). No one wants to work with wire that small but as some have stated above 28 AWG is more than enough.
How you wire from your power source to these DPDT switches is another question. If you have them all on a single buss then simply add up the current requirement. Maybe you have a large layout with multiple control panels with each panel controlling just few switches. Then its simply the total of each cluster.
No need to select a single wire size based on total number of switches.
BTW you can activate a switch then remove power and it will stay in position. Mine are only powered to move them. I have replaced the supplied .025" music wire with .040". The points stay in placed even unpowered.
Pete
Pretty much bang on ...
smaller wires from from toggle switch to tortoise, larger from power source to multiple toggles switches.. based on total draw by section or bank.... which is roughly 15-16ma per tortoise @12V, as most people wire them for constant stall to ensure turnout points are held firmly to the stock rails ...solid is fine, easier to hook up, and they aren't going to be constantly moved..
If it matters, the AWG 'power transmission' rating would not be applicable, as this rating is for multiple conductor cables that are shielded in conduit or similar... not single conductor cables in relatively open air... chassis rating is the one to use..
Billy D posted:. Sorry, but I find it very hard to believe that a 12V DC motor under 100% full load, only requires 15-16 ma. (0.016 amp.) at full stall amperage. Has anyone else?
Just checked two of them ..
at 12V DC, one was 0.0148A, other was 0.0152A ...14.8 ma 15.2 ma ..
at full stall , pretty much the Circuitron spec..
wvgca posted:If it matters, the AWG 'power transmission' rating would not be applicable, as this rating is for multiple conductor cables that are shielded in conduit or similar... not single conductor cables in relatively open air... chassis rating is the one to use..
I was being conservative here. Chassis rating is off the bottom of the charts or smaller than 40 AWG.
You can take them to water.......................
Pete
Simple Billy D, it's gearing. They probably use the same motor, but the gearing is so low that there's insignificant load on the motor for any scale switch.
Good grief! If you want to argue, find someone else!
All I said is sufficient gearing will basically cause the motor to have very little load, regardless of the switch involved. It takes a certain amount of current to spin a totally unloaded motor. With a high gear ratio, there will be very little load experienced by the motor, even with a significantly different load, the gear train probably contributes more to the loading of the motor than the switch mechanism. Nowhere did I say "exact", try not putting words in my mouth.
Since the tortoise only draws around 15-16ma at full stall, there isn't much room for a huge difference in running power, regardless of the load. I think you should revisit Mechanics 101, the section on gear ratios.
Feel free to have the last word, because this is my last word in this topic.
For your consideration. A DC motor that has not overheated and shorted out its windings will never draw more than its stall current.
If the load is too great causing it to stop moving it will simply draw its stall current. Nothing more. As long as its moving it will draw less than its stall current.
Most DC motors are NOT stall motors. They will draw their stall current until they overheat and short out.
Tortoise uses stall motors. Not to be confused with the motors in your engines.
Pete