I’ve been
refraining from posting this article for about a month now. It was already
written, ready to publish and then disaster struck in the for of MTB turnout
motors, or should I say 2” thick foam roadbed. I’m not a fan of wiring because
my brain isn’t wired for that kind of work. Yet, I wanted to try it out. Give it a chance, at least do it once in my
lifetime and call it done, case checked, been there done that. However, while
everything went relatively smoothly, I didn’t expect foam to throw a wrench at
my efforts. |
| Slicing the roadbed and cutting a mounting hole |
Any switch
motor will struggle to move points if mounted under more than a 1” thick sub
roadbed. At 2”, forget it. You will need linkages in a way of another. Alright
if you planned for that, but a really catastrophe if you didn’t like me. It
wasn’t in my plan and dealing with rods and links wasn’t something I wanted for
that layout supposed to be fun an easy. I try a tortoise, a MP4 and a bullfrog.
They all relatively failed at the task and only one solution remained: cut a
hole in the 1/4 “ plywood then carve out some foam to reduce thickness to 1”.
 |
| Wooden saddles |
My idea was to build a wooden saddle that could be inserted under the roadbed.
Under normal circumstances, just gluing a piece of plywood under the foam would
have been enough to fix the motor, but since I was using foam splines, they
were warping and flimsy when carved out. The saddle was required.
 |
| Wooden saddles secured in place |
Fortunately,
after making a jig and using my oscillating saw, I was able the cut the foam in
a reliable and quite precise way. Everything was secured with a generous amount
of caulk. Installing the turnout motors was fairly easy and everything is working
fine at this point.
 |
| MP4 motor in place. I later enlarged the holes to make wiring easier. |
However, it just confirms my hatred toward foam as a structural
material. Let’s be honest for a minute. This building material is full of dimensional
discrepancies caused by manufacturing. Add to that its natural tendency to warp,
sag and contract with age due to degassing, it’s inherent inflammable nature as
recently seen with Ken Patterson’s layout fire and the unnecessary complications
it creates with turnout controls. I see little redeeming qualities remaining to
outset these things. For good reasons, I’m phasing out that material from my
modelling life, except for very niche uses where it performs as intended. The scenery
and landforms will be crafted in cardboard, paper and other more traditional materials.
That is deeply informing my choices for the future Monk Subdivision.
I want to
credit Jonathan Jones for not having dropped the towel at wiring. He posted an
interesting article about his wiring efforts a month ago and it convinced me to
soldier on and move forward. I was quite near to trash the project altogether.
But back with more positive things about wiring because not everything is dark
and gloomy, on the contrary.
Up until
now, I only wired layout by running bus wires and attaching feeders to each
piece of rail. All that was connected to a DPDT switch which selected either DC
or DCC power. Nothing more, nothing else and it worked. Turnouts were
controlled manually with Bullfrog rods by Fast Tracks. Simple and elegant for
modules. But this time, I wanted to experiment something I had never done with
fancy panels, metal switches, display LEDs and electric turnouts. I even went
as far as break the layout into 3 blocks for DC operation.
The lesson
learned is that just adding a few gizmo makes the number of wires quadruple if
not more. Not being the sharpest tool in the shed when it comes to wiring, I
decided to do it by baby steps. I have drawn diagrams to understand what I
needed and built the parts I was the most confident first, starting with
feeding power to the track, preparing the LED, installing the switches. I could
easily lose track of all that mess if I was trying to do everything at once. In
that regard, the UK YouTube channel Horsehay Railway Modeller provided a lot of
inspiration. The way he twist wires together to create manageable cables that
you can run neatly and trouble shoot in case of defect really made my life much
easier.
At this
point, I'm about 1/3 done. Turnouts motors still need to be installed and
wired, and I have to create the auxiliary power system that will feed the LEDs
indicators. Also, having built two control panels, one for each side of the
layout, I will need to add another NCE Power Cab Panel to the yard. I'm already
regretting not having made my secondary panel larger with DC and DCC plugs.
Live and learn I guess! I decided to print another version of that panel to take
that into account and to revise the track layout of the yard since turnout location
was modified from my original plan when I laid track.