Wiring Your Model Railroad For DCC (335)

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  • Опубліковано 4 лип 2024
  • Wiring a model railroad for DCC need be the confusing job many make it out to be. There are a few basic rules to follow and as long as you know and follow them it can be a fairly quick and easy part of your model railroading adventure. Today I want to share with you what I consider to be the most important of these rules and also discuss why you need to do it that way.
    Here's a link to a source for zip cord. Note this is listed as speaker wire. Do not buy CCA, that is copper clad aluminum. Look for the OFC, oxyfgen free copper.
    www.parts-express.com/wire-ca...
    Chapters
    0:00Intro
    0:41 DC vs DCC
    2:30 Wire sizes
    3:30 Rail sizes
    4:53 Scale
    5:25 The 30' rule
    6:15 Twisted pairs and Zip cord
    9:27 Signal rejection
    11:00 Snubbers
    11:57 Stranded vs Solid wire
    13:17 Testing existing wiring
    15:45 Feeders
    17:00 Wrapup
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 53

  • @weird_audio_man
    @weird_audio_man 2 місяці тому +1

    As a former network engineer, I appreciate this so much! My grandfather's setup was DC, so 20 years later I am now planning a layout. Having you explaining the similarities of DCC power and signal, to a standard PoE, has really made this a breeze! Thank you!

  • @richschaufert7310
    @richschaufert7310 4 місяці тому +1

    Of all the videos on Model skills especially DCC yours are the best! I'm just restarting the hobby after 40 years absent. I still have much of my old block wired and DC engines so your videos are excellent advice. Glad I dragged all my old rolling stock and structures around thru my travels and now get to enjoy our hobby again with DCC.

  • @SD45-ET44AC
    @SD45-ET44AC 10 місяців тому +6

    Your book is easy to understand and I’m glad I got it. Always good to know the basics.

  • @peterjhillier7659
    @peterjhillier7659 9 місяців тому +1

    Thank you Larry a really great Video dealing with First Principles Wiring, excellent.

  • @elsdp-4560
    @elsdp-4560 10 місяців тому +2

    Thank you for sharing.👍

  • @TwoRailfans
    @TwoRailfans 10 місяців тому +3

    We used solid 14 gauge with 18 gauge feeders.

  • @thomasgrassi8817
    @thomasgrassi8817 10 місяців тому +1

    Great information Larry I iuse 14 Gauge zip wire for my bus lines works great use snubbers also.

  • @michaelwright185
    @michaelwright185 10 місяців тому +2

    Just bought your book Larry!

  • @ramonpfister2424
    @ramonpfister2424 4 місяці тому

    Nice video sir, I just ordered your wiring book on Amazon while watching this vid.

  • @krystalstarrett6760
    @krystalstarrett6760 9 місяців тому +2

    Less wiring in my railroad with DCC. So long as all locomotives are DCC, just two wires hook up the whole system. 😊

  • @randydobson1863
    @randydobson1863 10 місяців тому +1

    hello larry it's is randy and i like yours video is cool thanks and i am used 18 gauge wire ) thanks friends randy

  • @mikedurhan9941
    @mikedurhan9941 10 місяців тому +1

    Now, get this straight, Puckett; you are one of the best things that ever happened to model railroading. You make things clear. And my boss likes things clear, see?
    Seriously, thanks, Larry. Please ignore my "gangster genre" if it offends you. Just funnin' with you a mite........
    Someday I hope you will explain the mysterious CV29 - that everyone speaks of - but never fully explains. It's sort of like, "well, it's out there, and we all have to tithe to it, but we don't completely understand it either - at least not enough to explain it fully". I have read so much that I am intimidated by it. Maybe I need a flow-chart, or a diagram???
    I appreciate you very much. You are an asset to model railroading.

    • @TheDCCGuy
      @TheDCCGuy  10 місяців тому

      Watch video #48.

    • @mikedurhan9941
      @mikedurhan9941 10 місяців тому

      Thanks, Larry. Will do.@@TheDCCGuy

  • @peteengard9966
    @peteengard9966 10 місяців тому +3

    I've never been an advocate for the suitcase connectors for a couple of reasons. #1 susceptible to moisture and corrosion. Especially on our portable modules. #2 is the size of the connection. Your putting a lot of current through only a knife edge connection. I personally would want a more substantial connection. Nothing worse than setting up for a train show and having to find a loss of power. Most times it has been a suitcase connector. Open the cover and see the green.

    • @TheDCCGuy
      @TheDCCGuy  10 місяців тому +1

      Well, I think that the engineers at 3M figured out just how much current these little buggers can take and designed them accordingly. As fir the moisture issue, the basic concept of the insulation displacement connector was for use in telecommunications and in automotive settings especially for interior wiring such as the radio installations, etc. While these situations are not exactly hermetically sealed they don’t get exposed to a lot of water and hopefully your modules are not as well!

  • @Quince828
    @Quince828 10 місяців тому +2

    A really useful video. I like the idea of using the zip wire, or as it’s sometimes called speaker wire. The plus and minus are clearly indicated and I’ve used it a lot for stereo speakers. Do things such as the suitcase connectors, toggle switches, or the small gauge feeder wires add a significant resistance to the overall DCC signal?

    • @TheDCCGuy
      @TheDCCGuy  10 місяців тому +4

      No, I’ve been using these connectors for over 20 years without problems and switches have been used for decades longer. You need to be careful on large modular layouts where some connectors between modules can add up to significant voltage loss.
      Small gage feeders can be problematic but not if kept short. I use 20ga feeders but keep them about 8” long. However at my old club where telephone hookup wire was used and runs were sometimes several feet, you could watch locos slow down and speed up due to the variable resistances of the feeder wires.

  • @BASILPANAS
    @BASILPANAS 10 місяців тому +5

    Does using a wire gauge more than what is needed create another set of problems? Thank you for the video, Larry.

    • @TheDCCGuy
      @TheDCCGuy  10 місяців тому +6

      I cannot think of any electrical issues, but from a practical viewpoint larger wires are relatively more difficult to manipulate, solder, connect, and work with in general than one of smaller size. So it really is best to use the correct size for the job at hand from the outset. However, a size variance of small proportions isn’t likely to be an issue in that respect either. So for example using 12ga wire instead of 14ga would not be overkill but going to 10ga or 8ga would, it also would be a very expensive option-copper isn’t cheap!

    • @BASILPANAS
      @BASILPANAS 10 місяців тому +2

      @TheDCCGuy Thank you, Larry. Congratulations on the success of your channel! You must be one of the hardest-working UA-camrs out there.

  • @nialatelevoj6113
    @nialatelevoj6113 10 місяців тому +1

    extension and branching with OFC skrl type cable Audtek: What type of electrical connector? For a T branch, do you make a cut in the outer sheath then insert a 3M T-top for each wire?

    • @TheDCCGuy
      @TheDCCGuy  10 місяців тому +1

      I would essentially use a “Y” with one branch dropped off the main bus using a suitcase connector.

  • @dougalexander5871
    @dougalexander5871 10 місяців тому +1

    Question relating back to decoder install: what power soldering iron are you using, and what solder. It seems that you use no flux, so I’m guessing that the secret is in the solder?

    • @TheDCCGuy
      @TheDCCGuy  10 місяців тому +2

      There are 5-6 videos,on the channel,about my soldering tools and techniques. Just scroll down through the list on my channel page.

  • @aaronandraquel
    @aaronandraquel 10 місяців тому +2

    Does there need to be rail insulators between the feeders on the rails?

    • @TheDCCGuy
      @TheDCCGuy  10 місяців тому +1

      No, you would only insulate the rails at block boundaries or in reversing situations.

  • @greatnorthernrailwaytother4711
    @greatnorthernrailwaytother4711 10 місяців тому +2

    Hi Larry. Thanks for another helpful video. My HO layout is a 15m loop, originally wired for DC with many isolating sections. The power runs from around the loop in both directions from the controllers. The sections furthest from the controllers are not connected. I am considering rewiring the mainline with a pair of bus wires similar to your zip wire and just have the four yards around the loop connected through the existing panels ( to allow sidings with locos not in use to be switched off) should I connect the new mainline bus into one continuous loop. Regards Peter.

    • @TheDCCGuy
      @TheDCCGuy  10 місяців тому

      Short story-don’t wire as continuous loops. Now the long story-every time this question has come up the EE guys always say never connect a loop back on itself, always use a linear bus. Most say it gets down to the difference in the lengths to where the loops are joined, which of course is variable within the same loop, and in turn means where the signals meet they will be different. Although this might seem a trivial matter you have to also consider how fast these signals are transmitted on a pair of wires. So I always recommend that loops be broken to create two independent bus configuration.

    • @greatnorthernrailwaytother4711
      @greatnorthernrailwaytother4711 10 місяців тому

      @@TheDCCGuy Thanks Larry, I’ll just upgrade the wires then but leave them disconnected. (However they must get connected for a second every time a loco completes a loop.) cheers Peter.

    • @neilharbott8394
      @neilharbott8394 10 місяців тому

      @@TheDCCGuySo as the track is a continuous loop, would you suggest inserting insulators at the end of each bus? So that the track and bus break at the same point.

    • @TheDCCGuy
      @TheDCCGuy  10 місяців тому +1

      No, cut gaps in both rails somewhere, say halfway round the loop and cut your power bus so it forms 2 separate buses, one for each leg.

    • @greatnorthernrailwaytother4711
      @greatnorthernrailwaytother4711 10 місяців тому

      @@TheDCCGuy Thanks again, will do. 🙂

  • @dundasjunctionmodelr.r-jam8267
    @dundasjunctionmodelr.r-jam8267 9 місяців тому

    Larry if use two sets of buss wires , do I need a snubber at each end , command station is in the center of the layout

    • @TheDCCGuy
      @TheDCCGuy  9 місяців тому

      You would use one at the end of each bus. You also may use one at intermediate points on long bus runs.

    • @dundasjunctionmodelr.r-jam8267
      @dundasjunctionmodelr.r-jam8267 9 місяців тому

      Larry thanks for the information

  • @franktietjen6261
    @franktietjen6261 6 місяців тому +1

    My current train layout is a DC system, I am in the processing of upgrading it so it can work with both DC and DCC systems. I do not have any DCC controls at this time, but if I set up the layout correctly, I can add it in easily. One of the topics I have been reading about is TVS Protection (1.5KE36CALFCT-ND) and the correct placement. Should this be used and were would you put it? I currently have a Lionel ZW transformer and would love to keep using it. Also, I just picked up your books "DCC Projects & Applications, Vol. 4" and "Wiring your model railroad". At a quick glance, you do not talk about TVS protection in either book unless I missed it.

    • @TheDCCGuy
      @TheDCCGuy  6 місяців тому

      Mixing DC and DCC is not a good idea except on the most basic of layouts. There are so many accessories now for DCC that are not compatible with DC that you will not be able to use if you want to mix them so you’re hobbling yourself. Now if you just want a simple loop or small switching layout you can get by and I did a video a few months ago on the subject so feel free to scroll through my listings on my channel hime page. As for TVS, I am finding them on various DCC accessories such as circuit breakers, autoreversers, etc. Some experimenters have suggested also placing them on the motor leads from the decoder. Others say on the inputs to the decoder. I have not had time to experiment myself and from what I have seen from others the jury is still out. Plus I have never cooked a decoders with voltage spikes, I prefer to make sure my wiring is as bullet proof as possible and avoid them in the first place.

    • @franktietjen6261
      @franktietjen6261 6 місяців тому

      Thank you for the information is it very helpful.@@TheDCCGuy

  • @Zebrails
    @Zebrails 10 місяців тому +2

    You mention a "Hot" connection, or rail... what is another name for "Hot", since it doesn't pertain to the temperature?

    • @TheDCCGuy
      @TheDCCGuy  10 місяців тому +1

      In wiring a wire that is carrying an electrical current is considered to be “hot”. This is commonly used with AC wiring to refer to the black or in some cases red wire as hot while the white wire is the neutral wire.

    • @Zebrails
      @Zebrails 10 місяців тому

      Thank you very much.@@TheDCCGuy

  • @almyers9834
    @almyers9834 9 місяців тому +1

    What size feeders would you use for n scale and bus size

    • @TheDCCGuy
      @TheDCCGuy  9 місяців тому

      20-22 ga feeders and 16-18 ga bus.

  • @kimvaughan495
    @kimvaughan495 10 місяців тому +1

    I’m trying to find out what the green foam is . And what name does it go by . I’m in the USA. So I’m trying to find it.

    • @TheDCCGuy
      @TheDCCGuy  10 місяців тому +1

      Run down to Lowes, it is their store brand insulation board.

  • @steveashcraft718
    @steveashcraft718 10 місяців тому +2

    I know a lot don't like brass rails but I know that brass is a excellent conductor.

    • @68Jaguar420G
      @68Jaguar420G 10 місяців тому +2

      Until it tarnishes which is an effective insulator stopping power transmission across the wheel/railhead interface.

    • @steveashcraft718
      @steveashcraft718 10 місяців тому

      @@68Jaguar420G Any track can do that. Just keep it clean.

  • @demetriospappas1112
    @demetriospappas1112 10 місяців тому +1

    There is a formula that we electricians use for distance and voltage drops. I’m not sure what the specs would be be for lower voltage like this but I will think anything like this you would run into drops anything past 10-12 ft unless you us 14 or 12g wiring throughout

    • @TheDCCGuy
      @TheDCCGuy  10 місяців тому

      Yes, in my book I have tables that provide the voltage drop per foot of at 1 and 5 amps. Also for different rail codes.

  • @andrewway3404
    @andrewway3404 8 місяців тому

    I started building a on30 layout, a simple figure 8 up and over with 4 switchs for a train yard. I used the peco switchs and track plus a little ddc transformer. So my bachmann 0-6-0 sounds and runs great on the figure 8, but as soon as I throw a switch, the transformer freaks out! I think the switchs are the problem, I've nailed all the tracks down and soldered all the rail connections. I'm at a loss and very disappointed, I was told by many that dcc was the best way to go.