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Discussion Boards => Large => Topic started by: RkyGriz on April 18, 2015, 09:59:40 PM

Title: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: RkyGriz on April 18, 2015, 09:59:40 PM
Hi, again! I have installed LED lights on 4 of my passenger cars. The lights give a bright white color, which is too bright and unrealistic looking. They are powered by the track. I have a couple of questions . First, I was wondering what color LED lights give off the most realistic look. Secondly, they only light when the train is going forward. How is this problem solved? Should I convert them back to battery or is there something I can wire into the cars to fix this? Another thing, could I paint these white lights with a transparent paint to correct the color? Thanks guys!
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: Joe Zullo on April 18, 2015, 10:07:37 PM
You need to power them with a full wave rectifier. Adding a large capacitor eliminates blinking. These parts are available inexpensively on line. I have done this on my 6 Bachmann J&S coaches and it works great.

(http://freightsheds.largescalecentral.com/users/sparkyjoe/Boarding-at-Birdwell-station_medium.jpg)
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: RkyGriz on April 18, 2015, 10:59:40 PM
I tried looking for the parts but I was a little confused as to which type and voltage/amp rectifier and capacitor I should buy for the lights. There were several choices and I'm not sure what to buy. Suggestions? Thanks again, Chuck! PS: Those cars look great!
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: Kevin Strong on April 19, 2015, 01:45:06 AM
A rectifier such as this: http://www.parts-express.com/400v-2a-bridge-rectifier--050-015 (http://www.parts-express.com/400v-2a-bridge-rectifier--050-015) will work well. For the capacitor, you'll want one rated for voltages greater than your track voltage, but I couldn't tell you what capacity you should aim for.

As for the color of the LEDs themselves, you have a few options. First would be to go to your local hobby shop and look for translucent paint used for model RC cars. Tamiya (?) makes some, but I'm sure there are others. If the LEDs are "cool white" (blue-ish in color) then try painting the LEDs with orange translucent paint. You can also try an orange or brown Sharpie marker.

Later,

K
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: Joe Zullo on April 19, 2015, 07:50:51 AM
The bridge rectifier that Kevin mentioned is a good one for this application and similar to what I used. As for the capacitor, this is what I used to good effect...
http://www.parts-express.com/3300uf-25v-radial-mini-electrolytic-capacitor--020-1126  ;D

Just remember that the capacitors are polarity sensitive and must be hooked up on the output side of the rectifier!
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: Loco Bill Canelos on April 19, 2015, 11:58:17 AM
RkyGriz,

In the future you could also try the "warm white" LED's, They seem to give off the more mellow yellowish color of a gas lamp.  Radio shack used to carry them and still may, but you can also get them from some of the online electronics stores.  Of course Kevin's trick is great for the ones you already have.   Christmas before last I bought a string of 100 warm white Led Christmas lights.  I was amazed to see that each LED had its' own tiny resistor, which made all kinds of applications very easy.  Not all strings have the individual resistors.

Glad you are having fun!!

Bill
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: jviss on April 19, 2015, 04:51:20 PM
Hi guys,

Joe, your cars look great!  

I assume you guys are all talking about regular DC track power, not DCC?

I, too, have plans for track powered lights in my coaches.  I'm using DCC.  This is not fully executed on all three cars yet.  I purchased full wave bridge rectifiers nearly identical to Kevin's suggestion, but mine are 100V 3A.  I got them on eBay at 5 for $1.99 plus shipping; I ordered 10 and got a shipping discount, so they came out to 74¢ each, delivered.

I then removed the factory lights and put in a 12" strip of LEDs inside the roof.  They are self-adhesive, cut-to-lenght LED strip lights, It's about one LED every 5/8".  They take 12V, but will run on less, down to about 5 or 6V, if I recall correctly.  They are available in warm white, cool white, and a rainbow of colors.  The ones I bought are described on Amazon thus:

"HitLights Warm White SMD3528 LED Light Strip - 300 LEDs, 16.4 Ft Roll, Cut to length - 3000K, 82 Lumens / 1.5 Watts per foot, Requires 12V DC"

$7.99 shipped (Amazon Prime, 2-day), so 2.7¢ per LED, including attachment and resistors.  

I had tried this out with some cool white strip LEDs I had, and it was way too bright, even running off the 9V batteries that are the standard power source for lights in my coaches.  So, I assumed I'd dim them with a resistor, the old trial and error method.  Then I stumbled across these remote control dimmers on Amazon, designed specifically for strip LEDs:

"Lerway Mini LED Controller Dimmer with RF Wireless Remote Control DC 5~24V 12A R106"

These take form 2 to 24V in, and allow dimming from off to full brightness with a keychain-like RF remote control.  One reviewer discusses getting multiple dimmers to respond to the same remote.  They are now $2.85 each!  I bought 3.  

So, for power, I purchased kits of brass tubes, springs, and brushes, which the Bachmann passenger trucks are set up to accept.  I have metal wheels to complete the conversion.  

I will put a capacitor on the rectifier output, but probably also a resistor first, to limit the inrush current when it's first powered up.  A discharged cap looks like a dead short to DC.  There's probably enough bulk resistance in the rectifier to do the job, but why take chances?

So, DCC, track-powered, remotely dimmed, warm-white LED strip lights.  This will work standing still, in reverse, etc.

One final point: the color.  According to John H. White, Jr., in his 1977 article on Pintsch lights in Technology and Culture, the light was "an intense, slightly blue-green flame."  I'm thinking a cool white might be the best match for this.  Pintsch gas lights were the dominant lighting source for the period of these cars, 1888 to 1928 or so.  
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: Joe Zullo on April 19, 2015, 05:14:14 PM
Thanks jviss. I am now working to add passengers to my 6 car fleet. I know these are supposed to be 1:22.5 scale, but the seats are really tiny. I have found that 1:25 scale seated people (Ebay) work well if you cut the feet off. I have already populated a couple of cars with 12 people and they look good so I ordered 24 more!
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: Kevin Strong on April 19, 2015, 05:19:10 PM
I'm not sure Pintsch gas was all that common in narrow gauge circles. Typically if a passenger car had gas lighting, you'd find a cylindrical gas tank under the floor of the car. That's not a common feature when you look at photos of early narrow gauge passenger cars. The East Broad Top used oil lamps until the mid 1910s when the locos were fitted with electric generators, then they took power from that.

Later,

K
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: jviss on April 19, 2015, 06:39:50 PM
Hi Kevin,

Thanks again for sharing your knowledge on these topics.  Gee, I have my heart set on Pintsch gas lighting - oh well!  I'll search for narrow gauge use of it.

I can't find anything about locomotive generators being used to power anything other than head and tail lights, but maybe I'm looking in the wrong place.  That would be a pretty big generator - where was it mounted, and powered?  I assume steam?

Thanks,

jv
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: Kevin Strong on April 20, 2015, 12:02:20 AM
If you're freelancing, anything goes! Ozark Miniatures makes an airtank casting that will work very well for a Pintsch gas tank. Paint it black and attach it to the bottom of your passenger car, and voila!

Later,

K
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: jviss on April 20, 2015, 09:54:28 AM
The Rio Grande Southern ran narrow gauge passenger coaches with Pintsch gas lighting:

https://books.google.com/books?id=qImBxR3p2d8C&pg=PA69&lpg=PA69&dq=pintsch+lamps+in+narrow+gauge+cars?&source=bl&ots=WjEvNOuB9v&sig=cHC5MeNH63pk5uHdpn4ZLrVwgXc&hl=en&sa=X&ei=gwM1VcjDHMuhNo2xgMAF&ved=0CB8Q6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=pintsch%20lamps%20in%20narrow%20gauge%20cars%3F&f=false (https://books.google.com/books?id=qImBxR3p2d8C&pg=PA69&lpg=PA69&dq=pintsch+lamps+in+narrow+gauge+cars?&source=bl&ots=WjEvNOuB9v&sig=cHC5MeNH63pk5uHdpn4ZLrVwgXc&hl=en&sa=X&ei=gwM1VcjDHMuhNo2xgMAF&ved=0CB8Q6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=pintsch%20lamps%20in%20narrow%20gauge%20cars%3F&f=false)

The Durango and Silverton ran narrow gauge coaches (at least one!) with Pintsch gas lamps:

http://www.coloradoinfo.com/travel.asp?pageid=19%7C381%7C561 (http://www.coloradoinfo.com/travel.asp?pageid=19%7C381%7C561)

Here's a car that went from narrow gauge to standard and back to narrow, with Pintsch lighting:

http://www.midcontinent.org/rollingstock/CandS/dsp-passenger/offcar_050b.htm (http://www.midcontinent.org/rollingstock/CandS/dsp-passenger/offcar_050b.htm)
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: jviss on April 20, 2015, 11:55:41 AM
I've given this some more thought, and have recently done a lot of reading on the topic if lighting in passenger coaches.  I got White's book "The American Railroad Passenger Car," "The Car Builder's Cyclopedia of American Practice," and other reference sources.  What occurs to me is this: oil lamps were just not very bright.  There are historical comments of passengers who would stand in Pintsch gas lit cars rather than sit in oil lamp lit cars so they could read the newspaper.  The historical progression seems to go, roughly, from no lights, to candles, to oil, to gas, the Pintsch gas being dominant in the U.S. from about 1888 to 1928, with oil, gas, and even candle having coexisted historically, to electric in fits and starts, and even combination oil and electric fixtures.  I have a little experience with oil lamps, as I have a couple on my boat, mostly for the 'romantic' effect, and I can personally attest to the fact that an oil lamp at any distance is not a good reading light; and, they do produce soot.  So, the brightly lit passenger cars we see in model railroads must surely be Pintsch gas lamp lit!  Electric lights would be powered by batteries, under each car, or by a "head end" generating car, some of which even had Pintshc gas lamps for illumination if the generators were down for maintenance or repair! 

For modeling, the oil lamp light would be quite warm, I think, warmer than Pintsch gas, probably around 1000K; for Pintsch gas color temperature I can't find a reference, but one can assume cooler than oil, maybe more towards 3000K.  In addition, when mantles were introduced the Pintsch gas lamps burned brighter still, at much reduced fuel consumption, too.  Mantles can't be used with oil lamps. 

So, I'm going to pretend my PRR cars were fitted with Pintsch gas lamps, and ignore the lack of roof vents and the square box below the car in place of the gas tank.  For now.
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: Kevin Strong on April 20, 2015, 02:36:46 PM
Thanks for the links. It doesn't surprise me at all that the business cars would be outfitted with Pintsch gas lamps. The Telluride book's reference to narrow gauge sleepers is curious, though the D&RGW did have a few narrow gauge Pullmans (one being restored in Colorado Springs). The D&RGW stuck with kerosene lamps up through the 50s as seen in some photos. Pick your lighting source, and there's a plausible prototype for it in almost every era.

(BTW, check Ozark Miniatures or Hartford Products for suitable roof vents.)

With regard to the earlier question about using the steam generators on the locomotives to provide electricity for the passenger cars, they provided ample power, at least to a point (well within the needs of narrow gauge passenger trains). Pyle National made generators ranging from 500 to 7500 watts. While the electric lights were an improvement over the older lights, they were still fairly low wattage bulbs, so you could power a lot of them. Locomotive headlights at the time were less than 60 watts. I'd imagine passenger car lights were probably in the 20 - 40 watt range.

As for our models, I find the vast majority of lit passenger cars to be blindingly bright from a prototypical standpoint. But you have to balance that against the ambient lighting where we run them, which is typically not "real" nighttime lighting. We want to see the interiors we worked so hard on, so it's certainly acceptable. Alas, when you do get these cars running at night (real night), you find the passenger car lights lighting up the railroad brighter than anti-aircraft searchlights. You almost need a dimmer switch.

Later,

K
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: jviss on April 20, 2015, 04:11:57 PM
Quote from: Kevin Strong on April 20, 2015, 02:36:46 PM
With regard to the earlier question about using the steam generators on the locomotives to provide electricity for the passenger cars, they provided ample power, at least to a point (well within the needs of narrow gauge passenger trains). Pyle National made generators ranging from 500 to 7500 watts. While the electric lights were an improvement over the older lights, they were still fairly low wattage bulbs, so you could power a lot of them. Locomotive headlights at the time were less than 60 watts. I'd imagine passenger car lights were probably in the 20 - 40 watt range.

Thanks, Kevin.  Do you happen to have any references for that?  I apologize for being so finicky on this, but I just simply can't find any reference to coach lights being powered by the locomotive dynamo that powered the loco lights.  What I have found on Pyle-National dynamos is that they put out about enough for the loco and tender lights - 350 Watts for the model K, 500 for the model K2.  And, intuitively, I can't imagine an early 20th century dynamo of that size putting out anywhere near a kiloWatt, never mind 7.5kW.  Here's a reference from 1919, pretty late in the period of interest:

https://books.google.com/books?id=EJEjAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA43&lpg=PA43&dq=steam+locomotive+turbine+dynamo&source=bl&ots=n9LJBcYCuR&sig=aa259TEGTAlJvYvh_8PWtjZ6Vos&hl=en&sa=X&ei=3lI1VemMKYaMNpuigbgN&ved=0CF0Q6AEwCw#v=onepage&q=steam%20locomotive%20turbine%20dynamo&f=true (https://books.google.com/books?id=EJEjAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA43&lpg=PA43&dq=steam+locomotive+turbine+dynamo&source=bl&ots=n9LJBcYCuR&sig=aa259TEGTAlJvYvh_8PWtjZ6Vos&hl=en&sa=X&ei=3lI1VemMKYaMNpuigbgN&ved=0CF0Q6AEwCw#v=onepage&q=steam%20locomotive%20turbine%20dynamo&f=true)

I am pretty sure that electrical coach lighting in the U.S. was by batteries charged in the yard (PRR, for example), or by head end car generators that were small steam engines powered by locomotive boiler steam, driving large dynamos.  Axle powered dynamos never caught on in the U.S., as opposed to the UK and Europe.  I was wrong about this, apparently it did catch on, although slowly, and was adopted by several major lines just after the turn of the century (based on the Moskowitz system).

I'm going to keep reading and researching!  Fascinating topic.  
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: Kevin Strong on April 21, 2015, 12:32:19 AM
The model "T" was rated at 2.5kW, while the model "M" was 7.5kW. I just Googled "Pyle National generator" and found some Google Books references. Here's one - a 1922 cyclopedia of locomotive technology. (Well worth the download!)

https://books.google.com/books?id=oMY1AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA619&lpg=PA619&dq=pyle+national+generator&source=bl&ots=K2ypOqCNVr&sig=G3Mp3j658EnZ76DrpHPBPPR8_zg&hl=en&sa=X&ei=a2I1VcvbI4_uoAS5-4C4Ag&ved=0CCsQ6AEwBDgK#v=onepage&q=pyle%20national%20generator&f=false (https://books.google.com/books?id=oMY1AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA619&lpg=PA619&dq=pyle+national+generator&source=bl&ots=K2ypOqCNVr&sig=G3Mp3j658EnZ76DrpHPBPPR8_zg&hl=en&sa=X&ei=a2I1VcvbI4_uoAS5-4C4Ag&ved=0CCsQ6AEwBDgK#v=onepage&q=pyle%20national%20generator&f=false)

Know that there's a world of difference between standard and narrow gauge railroading when it comes to things like lights, batteries, power, and the like. I have no idea what the power consumption of a 12-car heavyweight passenger train might be. Narrow gauge railroads were comparatively primitive and generally resisted modernization, mostly because it was an expense they couldn't afford. Not only that, but the trains were fairly short. Even the San Juan--the D&RGW's premier narrow gauge passenger train--ran at between 4 - 6 cars most of the time. Powering two lamps per car at 6 cars is only 12 lamps total. At 100 watts per lamp (and that's probably high), that's only 1.2 kW.

The EBT's passenger coaches had electrical receptacles just under the roof at each end of the car. The tender was fitted with such a plug as well. Short extension cords ran power from one car to the next. You can see the cords in these photos:

http://www.rrpicturearchives.net/showPicture.aspx?id=918493

http://www.rrpicturearchives.net/showPicture.aspx?id=1261196

The plugs on the tenders were under the end beam to the left of the coupler.

I suspect two of the combines may have been fitted with a battery specifically to power a small back-up light that was fitted to the end of the roof used when the car was being used as a caboose. Those two cars had both electric lights for use when in a passenger train and kerosene lamps for when the combine was being used as a caboose.

Later,

K
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: jviss on April 21, 2015, 02:37:55 PM
Wow, that's interesting Kevin, thanks.

I'd like to apologize to RkyGriz for hijacking this thread.  Please let me know if I should stop pursuing this tangent, and perhaps start a new topic.

So, now, I wonder what particular dynamo is modeled on the BBH Baldwin 4-6-0.

Thinking, though, extension cords connecting cars is not evidence of a locomotive-mounted dynamo for car lighting, it's how it was done with head end power, i.e., axle or turbine powered dynamos in head-end baggage cars. 

I still can find nothing in the literature stating that engine headlight dynamos provided passenger coach lighting power. 
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: RkyGriz on April 21, 2015, 03:01:35 PM
No problem my friends. I'm finding your conversation interesting and I'm glad that you're having a good time!
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: Kevin Strong on April 21, 2015, 03:58:27 PM
Quote from: jviss on April 21, 2015, 02:37:55 PM
Thinking, though, extension cords connecting cars is not evidence of a locomotive-mounted dynamo for car lighting, it's how it was done with head end power, i.e., axle or turbine powered dynamos in head-end baggage cars. 

I still can find nothing in the literature stating that engine headlight dynamos provided passenger coach lighting power. 
Again, in terms of standard gauge practice, I can't say with any degree of certainty. The capacity is there; whether they used the dynamo mounted on the locomotive itself or another steam-driven dynamo located elsewhere, I don't know. It likely depended on the railroad, and the particular train being operated. Here's a reference for standard gauge: http://utahrails.net/pass/dynamos-hep.php (http://utahrails.net/pass/dynamos-hep.php) How widespread this would have been when you got away from the premier trains/premier railroads and down to the shortlines and branchlines, I don't know.

For the narrow gauge lines, "head end power" meant "the locomotive." They didn't have baggage cars with HEP equipment, nor were axle-mounted generators useful at the very slow speeds traveled by narrow gauge trains. If there was electricity being delivered to a narrow gauge train, chances are very good (almost certain) it came from the locomotive's generator. Private cars may have had batteries, but the typical day coach--if it was electrified at all--would not.

Narrow gauge passenger coaches rarely enjoyed the amenities of their larger standard gauge counterparts. Steam heat was enough of a rarity; most relied on coal stoves. Air conditioning meant opening the doors and windows. There wasn't a need for electricity outside of lights, and that presumed the railroad felt obligated to modernize to even that. After the 1920s, passenger traffic fell off precipitously on pretty much every narrow gauge line. The incentive to modernize just wasn't there. Converting the lights from kerosene to electricity wasn't going to put people in the seats, so why spend the money? Those that did used what they had and converted as cheaply as possible. That meant using power that was already available from the locomotive's generator.

Later,

K
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: jviss on April 21, 2015, 05:00:43 PM
Hi Kevin,

Thanks again for your reply.  Please know, I like a good argument, and it's not at all personal, it's fun to dig into these things. 

I just don't buy that head-end power meant loco dynamos for narrow gauge lines.  There are many reasons I feel this way, but the operative word is feel, as I don't have any documentary evidence, nor can I prove a negative.

But, you have provided some great info, and I will keep up the search, too!

jv
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: Kevin Strong on April 22, 2015, 04:46:33 AM
Quote from: jviss on April 21, 2015, 05:00:43 PM
I just don't buy that head-end power meant loco dynamos for narrow gauge lines.  There are many reasons I feel this way, but the operative word is feel, as I don't have any documentary evidence, nor can I prove a negative.

(http://1stclass.mylargescale.com/eastbroadtop/EBT12/EBT12TenderRear.jpg)

The green arrow is pointing to the plug on the tender that feeds power from the locomotive's generator to the passenger cars. The EBT did not have "head end power" cars. They didn't have axle-mounted generators. They didn't have batteries (except perhaps specifically for the back-up lights on the combines I mentioned earlier). The cords you see in those photos in my earlier post plugged into that receptacle on the tender. Unless I'm remembering incorrectly, I've ridden on trains whose lights were powered via that plug. I just never thought to take a photo.

With respect to how other railroads powered the electric lights in their cars, the only reference I've found to any narrow gauge railroad having "head end power" cars is the D&RGW, for use on the San Juan and Shavano trains.

http://daleangell.com/sites/Models/Trains/San%20Juan%20Express.html (http://daleangell.com/sites/Models/Trains/San%20Juan%20Express.html)

According to this site, they fitted their baggage cars with Delco (internal combustion) generators to supply electricity. Photos show fairly large exhaust stacks on the roof. To the best I can determine, only 38 cars (those used on the San Juan and Shavano) were electrified by the D&RGW. The rest retained their oil/kerosene lamps (as evidenced in photos). Note that this reference says the cars were fitted with these generators in 1947, where other references say the cars were modernized in 1936. My guess is that the 1947 reference is a typo.

Outside of that, I've not seen any reference to any special "head end power" cars on narrow gauge lines. Photos of latter-day Tweetsie trains show similar cords between tender and passenger car as what is seen on the EBT. The Tweetsie's private cars appear to have battery or tool boxes mounted underneath. (Alas, the book that describes the Tweetsie's passenger cars in explicit detail is not yet in my library.) The Tweetsie was building new 1st-class cars into the 1920s with oil lamps, so if they converted to electricity, it was later on.

The Waynesburg & Washington and Ohio River & Western railroads' passenger cars got electric lights in the 1920s, but published rosters make no mention of dedicated "head end power" cars, nor do photos show signs of any vents for generators (steam or other) as can be seen on the D&RGW baggage cars. The photos in the books I have do not show what connections might be between the first passenger car and tender.

Other railroads for which I have decent documentation didn't appear to have bothered electrifying the lighting in their coaches--either they didn't have regular passenger service, their "regular" passenger service was the daily mixed train, or simply never got around to it.

True, a lack of photographic or documentary evidence does not definitively mean they did not have such things, but the preponderance of evidence to the contrary would indicate it's unlikely they did. A 1.5kW generator certainly has the power to provide lights for a locomotive and a string of three or four passenger cars. The EBT wasn't doing anything magical with their electrical arrangement.

Later,

K
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: jviss on April 22, 2015, 01:14:48 PM
Thanks Kevin,

Head end power cars were usually not dedicated, but installed in baggage or combination cars. 

Question on when those plugs were installed!  I'm not surprised to see them on contemporary narrow gauge railroads, but wonder about their existence in, say, 1890, even 1920.  My feeling is that electric lights in narrow gauge passenger coaches is rare, indeed.

jv
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: Kevin Strong on April 23, 2015, 02:28:38 AM
QuoteHead end power cars were usually not dedicated, but installed in baggage or combination cars.

True, as seen on the D&RGW's cars. One other thing to consider--the D&RGW's baggage/HEP cars were modified specifically for the San Juan train. The San Juan ran parlor cars on the end, whose kitchens required 110v AC. The locos' dynamos don't supply that, so that's likely what necessitated the Delco generators more than anything else. I don't think we see other narrow gauge railroads with HEP-equipped baggage/combine cars because they didn't need 110v AC. Few had parlor cars to begin with, and fewer still had parlor cars with full electric kitchens. They could light their passenger equipment using bulbs compatible with the dynamos on their locomotives.  

QuoteQuestion on when those plugs were installed!  I'm not surprised to see them on contemporary narrow gauge railroads, but wonder about their existence in, say, 1890, even 1920.  My feeling is that electric lights in narrow gauge passenger coaches is rare, indeed.

The first EBT locomotive to arrive from Baldwin with a generator and electric headlight was #16, which arrived in 1916. The other locos were retrofitted with generators and electric lights in the ensuing few years. I don't know precisely when the passenger cars were fitted with electric lights, but photos of fan trips from the mid 30s show the passenger cars with the plugs/cords, so somewhere in that 15 - 20-year window between when the first generator-equipped locos arrived and those fan trips. They would not have been electrified prior to that time, as the locomotives did not have generators to power them. (Heck, prior to the mid-1910s, the passenger cars didn't even have automatic couplers or air brakes!)

Today, the EBT doesn't run their vintage passenger equipment much, relying on their converted flat and box cars. (Technically, they're not running anything right now, but I'm optimistic about the future.) The last time I rode the night trains, if memory serves, they had a small portable generator on the first car providing 110v to lights they strung along the cars.

I agree, it's doubtful any narrow gauge railroad electrified the lights in their passenger cars too much prior to the 1920s. If I were to make a guess, I'd guess you're probably looking at the mid - late 20s as the time when conversions began in any kind of significant numbers (if the numbers could even be described as significant).

Later,

K
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: jviss on April 23, 2015, 11:39:30 AM
Federal law required electric headlights in 1915.  So, I assume that most narrow gauge railways only electrified in response to that regulation. 

BTW, the way I read your comment was that head end power meant 110V AC - I don't think that's the case. My guess is that HEP for lighting would have been DC.

Few people seem to know that many places, even in our lifetime, used DC power for lights and ventilation in buildings, etc.

(My grandfather was the chief engineer for Fordham Hospital in the Bronx, where all of the electricity was generated with two steam engines, and the steam plant also supplied the heat.  Lights were DC.  Incandescent bulbs don't care, nor do universal motors).

Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: Kevin Strong on April 23, 2015, 10:42:05 PM
QuoteFederal law required electric headlights in 1915.  So, I assume that most narrow gauge railways only electrified in response to that regulation.

Arguably, yes, though it took many narrow gauge railroads literally decades to finally comply with the 1893 Safety Appliance Act. I tend to think railroads were much faster to adopt electric lights than other safety appliances was simply because they were a great deal brighter and much less hassle.

QuoteBTW, the way I read your comment was that head end power meant 110V AC - I don't think that's the case. My guess is that HEP for lighting would have been DC.

You misread. "Head end power" simply means power generated at a single point on the train and delivered to the individual cars via electrical connections from car to car. What form that power takes (and what generates it) is dependent on the needs of the equipment on the train. Whether it's 110v AC generated by a gas-powered Delco generator in a baggage car or 32v DC generated by a steam turbine atop the boiler of the locomotive, if it's supplying power to lights and other electrical devices in other cars in the train, I would call it "head end power."

Later,

K
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: jviss on April 24, 2015, 07:46:02 AM
Kevin, granted most of what I know about this topic comes from White's "The American Railroad Passenger Car," and various internet sources, but I don't think I misread, and I beg to differ with your view on this.  "Head end" refers to the lead car in a train, and was a term of art before electrical power was generated in the head end car.  Head end cars were usually baggage, or post office, or some combination including passenger/baggage combines.  Head end power for electrical lights was commonly axle-driven dynamos, or steam, either reciprocating steam engines or steam turbines driving dynamos.  Internal combustion engines for head end power were rare.  I have never, in any reading I've done so far, seen mention of a locomotive headlight dynamo used to light passenger cars, nor ever heard that referred to, or included in descriptions of head-end power. 
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: Kevin Strong on April 24, 2015, 03:16:58 PM
Quote...I have never, in any reading I've done so far, seen mention of a locomotive headlight dynamo used to light passenger cars, nor ever heard that referred to, or included in descriptions of head-end power.  

Whether using the locomotive dynamo to power passenger car lights falls under what you want to define as "head end power," I don't know. I never gave the terminology a moment's thought until we began this discussion. I would agree that a locomotive's dynamo is usually not considered "head end power" in standard gauge circles because the power requirements of the passenger cars were greater than the capacity of that specific generator, thus requiring a dedicated, separate power source.

Semantics doesn't change the fact that narrow gauge railroads were known to use the loco's dynamo to power their passenger car lights. You say you've not seen mention of it, all the while I've been mentioning it this entire thread. I've shown you photos of the electrical connections that carried that power back from the loco to the cars. That's how they did it. I'm not quite sure what else I can use to illustrate that point. I've studied the EBT in great detail for nearly 25 years, spending 11 of those years as the editor of the Friends of the EBT's quarterly magazine. They had no HEP units mounted in baggage cars (they only had two baggage cars, and they virtually never used them), no axle-driven generators, no battery boxes under the cars, nothing like their standard gauge counterparts relied on. If the EBT wanted electrical power for the train during their "common carrier" era, they used the dynamo on the locomotive to supply that power. Other narrow gauge railroads I've studied are equally devoid of special power generation equipment; the dynamo on the locomotive was pretty much the only game in town for them as well. The only narrow gauge cars specifically outfitted for head end power that I've come across (modern tourist-era examples notwithstanding), are the D&RGW's San Juan baggage cars, which had the aforementioned Delco generators. There may be others on lines I haven't looked at in any kind of detail, but they're certainly not common.

Again, my area of study has been narrow gauge railroad technology. I can't speak to standard gauge technology to the same detail, relying on White's books and other similar references. There are many things narrow gauge lines could get away with (or had to do a certain way) simply because they were narrow gauge, and the operating environments were vastly different from their standard gauge brethren. That, arguably, is part of the appeal of narrow gauge--the "make do with what you got" attitude that seemed to be a fundamental underpinning of their operations.

Later,

K

Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: jviss on April 24, 2015, 04:56:29 PM
OK, Kevin, so if you're saying the EBT used the headlight dynamo to light passenger coaches during its passenger era, i.e., not during its present era as an "attraction," I will accept that.
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: Joe Zullo on April 24, 2015, 06:36:41 PM
Quote from: jviss on April 24, 2015, 04:56:29 PM
OK, Kevin, so if you're saying the EBT used the headlight dynamo to light passenger coaches during its passenger era, i.e., not during its present era as an "attraction," I will accept that.
Huzzah!
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: charon on April 24, 2015, 09:21:41 PM
Yea!
Goodbye JVSS!
Chuck
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: jviss on April 25, 2015, 07:54:45 AM
Quote from: charon on April 24, 2015, 09:21:41 PM
Yea!
Goodbye JVSS!
Chuck
I didn't say I was going anywhere!  :)

Seriously, just really interested in what was actually done, what color and how bright coach lights should be, and so on.

I'm going to model mine as having Pintsch gas lights. 
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: charon on April 25, 2015, 10:25:54 AM
 Just needling you, JV.  ;D  Good luck with your lights.
Chuck
Title: Re: LED Lighting Color for Jackson Sharp Passenger Cars
Post by: Kevin Strong on April 25, 2015, 01:03:12 PM
JV, the wiring's still there on the locos and vintage passenger cars on the EBT, so there's nothing that would prevent them from running the lights off the loco's dynamo tomorrow if they so desired. If memory serves, they have done so at least once or twice since I've been riding the railroad.

Their normal operations are daylight only, so lighting the cars isn't something they do but once or twice a year. The reason they've been using the portable generators lately is because the equipment they usually run on the night trains uses 110v lights; either work lights or strings of Christmas lights wrapped around the railings.

(Note: I'm writing this ignoring the temporary operational hiatus the railroad is currently on.)

Later,

K