Railroad switch

eetech00

Joined Jun 8, 2013
4,705
Lots of things are allowed in private switchyards and manufacturing sites that are not allowed on tracks that interact with roadways or tracks that are accessible to the general public. If no tanker cars or hazardous materials, even less regulation.
Heh...but no one is allowed to get killed..:cool:
 

MaxHeadRoom

Joined Jul 18, 2013
30,661
Lots of things are allowed in private switchyards and manufacturing sites that are not allowed on tracks that interact with roadways or tracks that are accessible to the general public. If no tanker cars or hazardous materials, even less regulation.
Not if employees are involved.
Work place safety in both US and Canada have regulations pertaining to such..
Max.
 

GopherT

Joined Nov 23, 2012
8,009
Not if employees are involved.
Work place safety in both US and Canada have regulations pertaining to such..
Max.
True for the train, the track and switchgear. Crossing signs, additional (secondary) sensors & indicators and supplemental communications are different.
 

MaxHeadRoom

Joined Jul 18, 2013
30,661
True for the train, the track and switchgear. Crossing signs, additional (secondary) sensors & indicators and supplemental communications are different.
I would have to disagree with that I'm afraid.
I worked for a spell with the major Canadian R.R. and became familiar with what regulations were in place, as pertains to the OP issue.
Max.
 

Thread Starter

robismod

Joined Sep 22, 2015
351
Geez...for those of you that gave me “ideas” on how such might be accomplished, thank you for participating. While I do appreciate the “cautious “ posters—damn, give it a break. I wouldn’t dream of doing anything unlawful, not in compliance with rules, dangerous, etc.
Now, that said, let me start over.
I’m building my own private railroad, backyard scale ride-on type...
 

Thread Starter

robismod

Joined Sep 22, 2015
351
Geez...for those of you that gave me “ideas” on how such might be accomplished, thank you for participating. While I do appreciate the “cautious “ posters—damn, give it a break. I wouldn’t dream of doing anything unlawful, not in compliance with rules, dangerous, etc.
Now, that said, let me start over.
I’m building my own private railroad, backyard scale ride-on type...
Feel free to suggest any tech tips on how one might accomplish this simply and cheaply...might be able to convince my “partners” to pony up the funds if affordable...
 

ebeowulf17

Joined Aug 12, 2014
3,307
I'll add a second vote for magnets and reed switches. Definitely the best switch type that I'm familiar with for that environment.

Sadly, I know basically nothing about solar panels or battery charge controllers, so no help there.
 

tranzz4md

Joined Apr 10, 2015
315
Getting the feel of this neighborhood?

Well, I'll deal with you as though YOU are the railroad guy and know all the policy stuff, which has no part of any answer here on a circuits page, anyhow.

My understanding is that you want solar powering for the LEDs, as well as activating them automatically below a certain level of ambient light.

#1- be conservative on your battery selection not lithium. It's not worth the trouble.

#2 - you'd be wisest to use a sealed switch, which probably means a magnetic actuator. It'll keep moisture, dirt, corrosion etc from wrecking things, and because of the low voltage and power consumption of the LEDs clean contacts are vital. You've got that vertical position indicator shaft to work with, so placing a magnet on an opposite or stationary member is simple, and the magnet and sealed switch can probably be kept tethered to each other, so as not to lose any pieces.

#3- using 2 separate, differently colored LEDs would be my chosen design, as opposed to a single bi-colored one, because a single lamp can fail or malfunction and still leave another functioning, and greatly simplify troubleshooting and function check.

4 - you know far better than us how large the solar face could be, or how small it must be. Not only is open space a consideration, but the air blast produced by passing rolling stock will exert forces on any such array.

I've built small solar charged/actuated systems using off the shelf stuff, but not as small as this (mine were about 300 sq.in PV array). You can use the voltage level of the battery charging circuit to determine if lighting levels are low enough to turn the LEDs on.
 

Alec_t

Joined Sep 17, 2013
15,119
When choosing lights, be aware that red-green colour blindness (albeit with varying severity) is fairly common. About 1 in 7 males have it, but surprisingly only about 1 in 2000 females. If you do use red and green, then the lights should be widely spaced to aid discrimination.
 

Thread Starter

robismod

Joined Sep 22, 2015
351
This is why R.R. engineers are not allowed to wear sun-glasses!;)
Max.
That rule was done away with many years ago...(at least in my neck of the woods)
I myself have a “color deficiency” issue and have some trouble with standard color vision tests (Isiharas Plates is our common one.) If warrantee, then employee is taken into the field and tasked your identify at least 21 signals in different areas. I pass those just fine.
Yes, many years ago my late dad talked of all employees not being allowed to wear sunglasses. Nowadays only the “transitional” glasses are not allowed...
 

Thread Starter

robismod

Joined Sep 22, 2015
351
That rule was done away with many years ago...(at least in my neck of the woods)
I myself have a “color deficiency” issue and have some trouble with standard color vision tests (Isiharas Plates is our common one.) If warrantee, then employee is taken into the field and tasked your identify at least 21 signals in different areas. I pass those just fine.
Yes, many years ago my late dad talked of all employees not being allowed to wear sunglasses. Nowadays only the “transitional” glasses are not allowed...
Sorry for the misspellings...my idling locomotive is loping so badly and vibrating..
 

MaxHeadRoom

Joined Jul 18, 2013
30,661
.my idling locomotive is loping so badly and vibrating..
You may be interested in this pic, my brother, who is a R.R. Tech, and I retrofitted these two retro-age loco's a few years back, we installed dynamic braking for use in the Canadian Rockies,
They had seen use on the flat lands of Ohio.
Taken after they came out of the paint shop.
Max.
 

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Thread Starter

robismod

Joined Sep 22, 2015
351
You may be interested in this pic, my brother, who is a R.R. Tech, and I retrofitted these two retro-age loco's a few years back, we installed dynamic braking for use in the Canadian Rockies,
They had seen use on the flat lands of Ohio.
Taken after they came out of the paint shop.
Max.
Ahhhh...now that’s a nice set of vintage power!
 

Bernard

Joined Aug 7, 2008
5,784
A possible start might a LED flag light, has solar panel, battery , battery control, day-night switch & wrong color LEDs. Needed, a switch to connect proper LED group. Some prices ran from US $ 10.00 to $ 400., comments on cheaper units = junk.
 
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