... Alligatored to my power supply and then weird things happened. Noisy operation of the door.
You apparently have NO connected to upper right terminal. Your have red DC+ to lower left and black DC- to lower right. So the lamp receives DC+ and DC- and should light up. When 153IR triggers, AC PWR appears on NO. This means the coil is receiving AC PWR and red DC+. This is bad! That is the coil is receiving half AC and half DC. This is actually worse (more buzzing) because this generally means the mechanism will vibrate half as often.
Went back to straight AC and there was less vibration. In the pic below, the bottom two terminals are power in. The single one at the top is coming from the NO terminal on the 153.
That makes sense. By hooking up straight AC, the coil now receives AC PWR and AC ground... in other words you aren't mixing AC and DC as in above case. The vibration frequency is twice as fast but is effectively smaller.
I switched the red and black wires to the bottom terminals and got no operation of the door (but I still had the light). But here's the thing........
That makes sense. This just swaps the valid DC+ and DC- wires to the bulb so the bulb still gets a valid DC voltage.
I took an alligator and connected bottom right to the top and the door opened and.........SILENT! No buzz.
Right. The alligator means the coil now sees DC+ and DC-. So DC on both inputs. No AC. No buzzing.
So......how to get this to work now.
Exactly. And that's the problem. When the 153IR triggers, it applies AC PWR to the NO. This would mean the coil sees a mix of AC and DC which is bad.
Somehow, changing the wiring to DC has effected that NO terminal. When wired for AC, it all works when the train triggers it. In DC, it is either very noisy when triggered or......if I switch the wires at the bottom, the train doesn't trigger it, but a jumper makes the door open and it's silent. Something about the wiring seems like it has to be different for the train to trigger and the door to be silent. Any ideas?