Monitoring turnouts
Hi & thanks for taking the time to read this. I'm a N00B at this so please bear with me and with any responses please write them out as if you're talking to a 10 year old with pictures if possible as my understanding is very basic.
I'm helping my dad out with his HO & O scale layouts and after working with his 022's on the O setup I was wondering if I could take a Red/Green HO signal and wire it to the 3 leads on an Atlas powered switch to at least give me an idea if the switch flipped.
The reason for this is the layout is kind of hard to see as it sits behind the O layout and you can't see the switches to see if they've flipped. I essentially want to have a visual confirmation. I'd considered the Atlas #57 lighted switch control as an add on as well but they seem to be discontinued for what I'd guess is a manufacturing defect.
So please, any help or responses would be welcome and IDEAS! I'm good with a soldering iron and I'm decent at wiring, just need a solution to this problem. THANKS!
Chi_Twn_Luv;
I'm guessing that by the "three leads of an Atlas powered switch;" you are referring to red,green, and black wires that supply a short burst of electricity to change the route a train will take when it passes through the switch. If that's correct then the short answer is no, you can't do it that way. If you did hook the signal up to those three wires it's lights would be instantly burned out the first time anyone "flipped the switch." I'm going to give you some words to use on your response to this. The only point of doing that is to have clear communication, by using the same names for a given item. Please don't be offended, I'm not trying to nitpick your words. Since you are new, nobody expects you to have all the technical terms memorized! In fact I just posted a lengthy document with over twenty pages of model railroad terminology to help Noobs understand what in heck we are talking about.
The item you call a "switch", we prefer to call a "turnout" when you say "flipped" we say "thrown". Thus, if I understand what you are asking, you want a way to turn on a light each time a turnout is thrown. The only way I can think of is to attach some type of electrical switch(that's why we call the track thing a turnout, to avoid confusing it with a switch.) (of the electric variety) When you said "Flip the switch" it sounds like you're turning on the room lights with a wall switch. From the context I was able to understand what you meant, I hope, but you can probably see how both of us using the same words makes things easier.
The electric switch needs to be activated when the turnout is thrown. If this is the common type of Atlas turnout, the mechanism that throws it is quite weak. The moving rails of the turnout(called points) are attached, by two rivets,to a plastic strip that moves from side-to-side when the turnout is thrown.(called a throwbar) This throwbar is your best bet for operating the electric switch which in turn will control the signal lights. I suggest using the smallest micro-switch you can find. Mount it to the table right next to the turnout, and with the micro-switch's moving metal arm in a position where the turnout's throwbar will hit it. The micro-switch has three terminals that wires can be soldered to. They should be marked "NO","NC", and "COM".
Find out what voltage the signal lamps need to light up, and solder a wire carrying that voltage to the "COM" (common) terminal. Attach the other wire from the lamp's power source to one wire from both lamps. The other wires, one from each lamp should be connected one to the "NO" (Normally Open) terminal and the other wire to the "NC" (Normally Closed) terminal. When the turnout is thrown to one route; one of the lights should come on. When the turnout is thrown to the opposite route, the other light should come on. You may have to adjust the position of the micro-switch to get this working right.
This pdf file is about Atlas turnouts. You may not need to make any of the improvements in it, but it has clear photos of the parts.
View attachment Improving Atlas turnouts.pdf
Good luck;
Traction Fan :smilie_daumenpos: