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On 29 Nov 2024, at 11:12, 'Len' via TramsDownUnder <tramsdo...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/tramsdownunder/985BB3BAF55D45C3AB96B29817A70C43%40LenPC.
I don't know what the reasoning was behind the choice of dash canopy lighting - perhaps it was seen as 'modern'.
Here's a pic by Peter Duckett from the collection of the Melbourne Tram Museum of what I think may have been the only W5 fitted with it.
As you can see in the pic, the illuminated dash was used to display advertising messages; perhaps that was part of the idea.
Mal Rowe - noting that Freight Car 19 was also fitted with dash canopy lighting at one stage.
I don’t recall seeing a a photo of a W5 with dash canopy lighting. Perhaps Mal has one in his collection?
On 29 Nov 2024, at 11:12, 'Len' via TramsDownUnder <tramsdo...@googlegroups.com> wrote:


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<736_BrunswickDepot_PWDuckett_Melbourne Tram Museum.jpg>
Further to Len’s comments, I can just remember “big” cars with dash canopy lighting so the phasing out by 1958 seems accurate.I don’t recall seeing a a photo of a W5 with dash canopy lighting. Perhaps Mal has one in his collection?
Can someone explain what changes were made to the lighting circuits to accommodate those two extra bulbs for the headlights? Standard headlights had one, dash canopy had three. Melbourne practice for lighting circuits was 6 x 120 volt globes in series per circuit (the nominal supply voltage being of course 600 volts, but running bulbs at less than the rated voltage was supposed to let them last longer). More bulbs in a circuit would make them dimmer.
It seems that each dash canopy had 6 lamps and each end was independently switched - see attached diagram.
So there was plenty of lighting - but a green dash was not a
great reflector.
What that diagram does not show is how the 'missing' headlight was compensated for in that circuit.
Mal Rowe - noting that the switching would allow both ends or
neither end of the dash canopy lights to be on.

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