Wiring for my upper level staging at Crescent Lake
continues. Half of the staging
tracks have been wired and connected at the station panel. Feeders have been dropped for the other
half of the staging tracks. While
I still had room to get at the underside (before covering everything with the
web of staging track bus wires), I realized I needed to get the directional
power feeds run to the switch machines.
This required a new reel of 16 ga. wire, a bunch of holes drilled, cable
pulling, and spade lug installations.
This has been accomplished for the two dozen switch machines at Crescent
Lake.
Underside of one of the switch ladders at Crescent
Lake. The heavy red and white
wires are bus wires. Six pair in
the lower half feed staging tracks.
A separated pair toward the top of the picture feed the switch
ladder. The bus wires are
separated to provide for detection.
The dark gray wires are 16-gauge pair used to feed directional power to
individual switch machines. The
clump of these wires penetrating the edge of the benchwork at the lower right will
feed into the switching system for controlling the turnouts.
I had worn down the graphite tip for my resistance soldering
probe while soldering feeder wires to bus wires for the first half of the
staging tracks. I needed a new
probe element. In addition, I
sought advice from the manufacturer about a separate issue anyway, so the call
was placed.
I use a Hotip resistance soldering unit marketed by PBL: http://www.p-b-l.com/ PBL advertises that one can talk to a
real person when one calls. That
certainly was my experience! Mrs.
Peters answered the phone and took my order, but I had a technical question, so
she immediately got Bill Peters on the phone. Bill is an expert at soldering and most other means of metal
construction used in the hobby.
His video on soldering, sold with the Hotip system, is a “must see” for
most hobbyists as they begin using the system or even as review before doing any
other soldering.
Hotip resistance soldering system by PBL. Tweezers are on the left; power
footswitch is in the center; and probe and clip are on the right.
Most resistance soldering units sold to the hobby provide a
choice of a clip and probe or insulated tweezers for applying the electric
current which produces the heat for soldering. Over time, my tweezers had become unusable. They would not pass much current, which
meant they failed to create the heat necessary for solder to flow.
I described this situation to Bill Peters. He immediately recognized the problem
and suggested the solution. The
tweezers tips are titanium rods inserted in holders on the tweezers. Mine had developed an oxide layer or
scale. The fix was very simple:
pull the tips out of their holders, clean the bases, re-insert (twisting to
remove any oxide in the holder) and re-tighten. I took me as long to describe this as to do it.
Forty-five minutes later, I had two-dozen crimped-on spade
lugs soldered to their wires. That
was at least an order of magnitude faster than trying to heat up the lug and
wire with an electronics soldering iron!
The right tool for the job was those soldering tweezers! This was the missing tool in my
arsenal. The probe and clamp are
essential for the feeder to bus wire connection. The tweezers are ideal for soldering spade lugs to their
wires.
Soldering a spade lug using the
resistance soldering unit tweezers.
When I bought my resistance soldering unit, I considered the
Hotip system from PBL and a competitor.
I elected to go with PBL because they had a good reputation locally and
I knew I had a better chance of getting advice when I needed it. I just needed advice and I am VERY
happy to report I got just what I needed. I recommend PBL and their Hotip system!
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