My sister has a couple of pieces in her “village” collection (Kohl’s St. Nicholas Square Village), one of which is the train station. The little colored lights running along the gutter flash on and off- and they’re very bright - and it bugs her to no end.
Any wiring geeks out there know a fix for this to make them just burn constantly?
I think they are LEDs. Is there an easy way to describe what I should be looking for in the way of a blinker module? I google-imaged “LED blinker module” and got confusing results…
Something between the first bulb and the plug.
I really couldn’t guess what it would look like, but I’m guessing you’ll find something wired in between the plug and the first light.
I suppose it could also include a step down transformer, and I guess it’s possible the lights can’t handle the constant voltage all the time, but honestly, I wouldn’t worry about it.
If the OP wanted to check to see if it steps down the voltage it could be easily done with a multi-meter, of course it’ll involve cutting some wires to check it. I’d guess that if it’s more then just a blinker it’ll say something on the box such as Input: 120V 60Hz Output: 12VDC 1.2a.
How about this. Xanthous, if you can find some sort of box or module, let us know if it says anything on it and whether or not it’s got screws on it to open it with (as opposed to needing to be cracked to get inside) and we can go from there.
They all blink together, one second on, one second off…
and p.s. this item is at my sister’s in a different town, so I probably won’t look at it until I go there for Christmas. I’ll come back w/ a new post if/when i decide this is worth a try!
Which includes the school and train station.
Specs say the station takes “1 C7 bulb (included)”. A C7 is the nightlight/Christmas tree light - 120 VAC (line voltage).
This may well be a different iteration than the ones cited here.
But: a C7 will not blink unless it is designed to internally. I don’t think they are made in blinking form, but I do remember (1950’s) tree lights which WOULD blink.
So: either find the blinking module or replace the bulb (if there isn’t a blinker module)