Zerogee
Clencher's Bogleman

This may well fall into the realms of "silly questions", because it's a pretty basic one that I'm 99% sure (well, OK, maybe 95%....) I already understand - BUT rather than get that tell-tale smell of frying electronics (not what you want on a Sunday, frying bacon is a much nicer smell....) I'd like to check first that folks here agree with what I think I understand..... 
When wiring loco lighting to a Massoth XLS, am I right in thinking that the lighting function outputs (Li-V, Li-H and Li-I) actually switch to ground (0 volts) when activated - thus the actual lights are connected between the relevant function terminal and the +24 volts output, as shown in the XLS manual diagram (page 13 in the version I have to hand here). I'm doing an install where the loco lamps will all be conventional bulbs, so obviously polarity doesn't matter for them, BUT the interior lights of the coach part (it's a steam railcar) will be some pre-wired LED strips, which of course are polarity sensitive, so for those strips I wire the POSITIVE (red) wire of the LED strip to the +24v connection and the NEGATIVE (black) to the "Li-I" ("Licht Innen") connection?
What is throwing me just a little bit is that in the same diagram (p.13), it shows an LED (with resistor) connected between one of the other function outputs - in this case F5 - and the GND (Ground, 0v) terminal - thus implying that while the light functions switch to ground when activated, the other functions (F1-F5) all switch to +ve when activated....... is there any simple reason that they are set up opposite ways round?
Does that all make sense to anyone?
Jon.

When wiring loco lighting to a Massoth XLS, am I right in thinking that the lighting function outputs (Li-V, Li-H and Li-I) actually switch to ground (0 volts) when activated - thus the actual lights are connected between the relevant function terminal and the +24 volts output, as shown in the XLS manual diagram (page 13 in the version I have to hand here). I'm doing an install where the loco lamps will all be conventional bulbs, so obviously polarity doesn't matter for them, BUT the interior lights of the coach part (it's a steam railcar) will be some pre-wired LED strips, which of course are polarity sensitive, so for those strips I wire the POSITIVE (red) wire of the LED strip to the +24v connection and the NEGATIVE (black) to the "Li-I" ("Licht Innen") connection?
What is throwing me just a little bit is that in the same diagram (p.13), it shows an LED (with resistor) connected between one of the other function outputs - in this case F5 - and the GND (Ground, 0v) terminal - thus implying that while the light functions switch to ground when activated, the other functions (F1-F5) all switch to +ve when activated....... is there any simple reason that they are set up opposite ways round?
Does that all make sense to anyone?
Jon.