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In lugnet.parts, Paul Janssen wrote:
> The thing is, all these Lego light/electric items are really expensive. Single
> lights will cost $3-5, and a cable will be $2-$4. The transformers and speed
> regulators you do should not buy at Shop at hom if money is tight, at Bricklink
> they are less than 1/3 of the "retail" price. The problem is that a lot of
> people like the lights, switches and motors. Therefore, they are very expensive.
> If you want to add just a few lights, and just two or three moving things to
> your layout, you're likely already talking $100 and up.
> On the other hand, it is very cheap to make lights and such yourself, but you
> must be willing to use non-Lego products, and be willing to mutilate Lego
> bricks. LED's and regular wire are 5-10 times cheaper than lego lights and
> wires, but it is rather time consuming to make those, so if you need someone to
> do it for you, it jacks the price right back up there at the lego level (hence
> there are not many third party sellers for this stuff). Thus, my advice is if
> you do not want/can spend the money to buy Lego lights and such, do it yourself
> with non-Lego products.
>
> Paul
Years back I had started converting my 9v train engines for lights. The idea was
to light up some of the cars on a train. I used LEGO wire jumpers that I cut to
tap off the motor, but you can always use off the shelf battery holders and wire
it yourself. For connectors I used female .1" spaced PC connectors, similar to
those used to connect the switch and LEDs to the mother board of a computer. You
can use the PC board mounted part (male) as the other half of the connection, or
a jumper between two of the female connectors. The nice part is that these are
small, some even fit through a hole in a technic brick. They are also the
correct size to slip onto the shortend leads of an LED.
Mat
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