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I have been unable to find the speaker part number for the SW 1500 3-volt.  Cannot find a parts list on the MTH web site.  Spoke to Midge at MTH and she says she only lists 2" speakers. Does anyone in forumland have the size & part number of the speaker used in more current 3-volt SW 1500's?

 

I am working on an older 2003 SW 1500 that had a 5-volt board, with a 45mm or 1.75" diameter speaker, which was very thin.  On this unit, the speaker goes into a box between the trucks.

 

I bought some Dayton audio 1.25" speakers, and they don't fit due to depth.

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4 ohm, 3   watt, 50 mm Diameter, 17.5 mm tallBF-0000034Star NR-05009-02       
4 ohm, 3 watt, 45 mm Diameter,   17 mm tallBF-0000039Star NR-04512-A3227       
4 ohm, 3 watt, 40 mm Diameter,   17 mm tallBF-0000041Asahi for RK VO-1000, SW-1       
4 ohm, 4 watt, 50 mm Diameter,   18 mm tallBF-0000043Veco       
4 ohm, 4 watt, 40 mm Diameter,   17 mm tallBF-0000047Veco (VO-1000)       
4 ohm, 1  watt, 40 mm x 28mm, 11 mm tallBF-0000048for Tinplate Monorail, 0-4-0 A5       
4 ohm, 3  watt, 40 mm x 28mm, 11 mm tallBF-0000050PUI AS0400P0-2-R PR 2-8-0 H3, 0-6-0   B6, RK 0-6-0 USRA      
Last edited by GGG
Originally Posted by Chuck Sartor:

The MTH part # is BF-0000013 for the 3 volt system. I have one in stock or MTH shows them available.

This is not a speaker for 3V system.  This is an 8 ohm speaker used on PS-1.  Volume will be subdued. 

 

Robert, do you more clearance than 9.5mm.  Won't the BF-48 or 50 clear?  Is there a hole in the chassis for the 17mm to clear? 

 

I try to keep all the 4 ohms in stock.  G 

Interesting, well I would hope the 11mm would fit, though it is in an oval plastic enclosure.  These are the speakers used in the climax as an example.

 

Just checked and MTH has this model in PS-2 3V and now P-3, so I would ask midge what part number is in that model and see what she says.  They may not have it, but they should be able to get it. Unless they modified the fuel tank.

 

Looking at the diagram for 5V it does how a hole in the chassis.  I have had to grind them open before to allow for speaker magnet room, than use a diesel hardware kit to provide clearance to mount the board over the speaker.  Just need to ensure there is height room in the shell.  I would think you could afford 2 to 9mm of clearance depending on what speaker you choose.    G

 

 

Last edited by GGG

The reason for the shelf is to provide clearance for the trucks.  If it weren't there, and tank front & back went straight down, the trucks couldn't turn.  I was thinking I had some space above the loco frame, but just realized that's only because I still haven't fastened the board down. 

 

I can put a 1-1/4" Dayton audio speaker in facing upwards and almost touching the PS2 board.  Don't know how much sound would get out.  I my toolbox, I also came across a pair of 3/4" x 1/2" 8-ohm speakers, that could both fit side-by-side, and wired in parallel, would give 4 ohms.  (out-of-phase?).

 

I note a suggestion above to use the original 16-ohm speaker.  I wonder how much sound would come out with a 4 ohm amplifier output????  If the 5-volt boards used 8-ohm speakers, it's interesting that MTH used a 16-ohm speaker; maybe that's all they could get that fit.

 

Other alternatives include making a fuel tank with sides only, or doing some minor cutting out of the current tank.  And aren't impedance matching transformers available?

 

I do appreciate all the ideas y'all are posting.  They are all thought provoking.

Finished the conversion tonight, except I'm waiting for the Varta batteries to come in.  This is the last time I order from that source in Asia.  Ran loco w/o the shell so it could hold a regular battery and it's fine. 

 

For what it's worth, the installed sound file is for a B&M GP-7.  The horn is much better than the SW1500 files, and I expect the EMD engines sound the same.

 

I used the original 16-ohm speaker, and the sound volume is more than adequate.  That is a pleasant surprise.

 

I had to turn the heat sink 90 degrees, so that the tab is in front of rather than alongside the board.  Unfortunately, MTH does not position the screw holes to easily permit this. 

When heat sink is off the front, the holes may or may not line up.  Best I could get is 1/2 hole diameter off, and some were worse.  Because it's so close, I don't see drilling and tapping another hole in the sink.  I do use compound.

 

I recall a recent post that someone has made heat sinks that only contact one side of the rectifier, and I would guess that removes less heat than omitting the screw?????

 

I wonder how much heat the rectifier generates?  Radio Shack similar rectifiers of higher ampacity don't mention need for a heat sink.

 

As an aside, I decided to replace the single rollers with doubles and find the latest have what appears to be a black nylon insert at each edge, as well as being lesser diameter.  I wonder what is the purpose???

Last edited by RJR

Some times that screw goes in at an angle, but normally it will grip and close up the sink.  The rectifier at that point doesn't have any critical material.  But if for some reason the hole is really off, you can break off the bottom and than use it as a nut.  Just make sure you trim it so it can't touch the legs of the rectifier.  G

That raises the question as to whether which is better at removing heat from the rectifier:  (1) A bracket that it tight on both side, with heat sink compound, but not screwed or (2) a bracket screwed tight, but on one side of the rectifier only?

 

I express no opinions, and since my game plan is to apply the fix I mentioned above, I am not soliciting any.

 

If any MTH R&Ders are reading, I suggest the screw hole in the heat sink bracket be relocated slightly to permit mounting bracket from front or side.

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