Login
or
Register
Home
»
Garden Railways
»
Forums
»
Garden Railroading
»
First Battery Powered Loco
First Battery Powered Loco
813 views
5 replies
Order Ascending
Order Descending
Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
Posted by
Anonymous
on Sunday, October 23, 2005 11:08 AM
Sounds cool Torby ! Its fun to interact directly with the railroad !
Reply
Edit
Tom The Brat
Member since
August 2004
From: North of Chicago
1,050 posts
Posted by
Tom The Brat
on Sunday, October 23, 2005 8:38 AM
You should see Ric Golding running his battery locos on the Gateway Modular Layout. It's a track powered double loop with lots of sidings and crossovers. As the track powered trains are going around one way, Rick works his way around the layout the opposite direction moving cars around the sidings.
Reply
Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
Posted by
Anonymous
on Saturday, October 22, 2005 9:39 PM
Thanks for the help , took it out today and their is no conflict with the two systems at all . Lots of fun running two trains in oppisite directons on a single track with only one passing siding ! I had to slow one down to a crawl and then wait for the other train to appear before proceding . Lots of fun ! Gonna wait a couple more weeks till I bring in all my buildings and other details for the winter . BRING ON THE SNOW !!!!
Reply
Edit
Tom The Brat
Member since
August 2004
From: North of Chicago
1,050 posts
Posted by
Tom The Brat
on Friday, October 21, 2005 9:05 AM
Sure, it will work, but there's an easy way to test:
Set your battery loco on the track along with a track powered loco. Don't apply power to the track. Run your battery loco. If the other stays dead, you're good to go.
If it doesn't work and the other loco runs too, check the track/battery switch in your battery loco.
Reply
kstrong
Member since
September 2003
From: Centennial, CO
1,192 posts
Posted by
kstrong
on Friday, October 21, 2005 1:07 AM
If the on-board electronics are isolated from the wheels of the locomotive (and the track), then yes you can. I don't know how you have your locomotive wired, so I'm hesitant to give a firm "yes or no" answer. When I do battery installations, I alway remove the track contacts, but your milage may vary.
Later,
K
Tuscarora Railroad Blog
Learn about the East Broad Top Railroad
Reply
Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
First Battery Powered Loco
Posted by
Anonymous
on Thursday, October 20, 2005 9:04 PM
I just ran my dash-9 a few minuites ago outside for the first time under battery power and its a real thing of beauity . The instilation of the Aristo/Crest onboard reciever took about 10 minuites to put in. I'm using their new Lith-ion batterys. I can't get over the slow speed you can acheive with this system . It's also real cool that the smoke is pouring out as its creeping by. Anyway I was wondering if I can use track power on another train on the same track at the same track without any problems. I have a Bridgewerks 15 amp transformer and their wireless remote that I would like to use when another operator is over.
Reply
Edit
Search the Community
FREE EMAIL NEWSLETTER
Get the
Garden Railways
newsletter delivered to your inbox twice a month
Sign up
By signing up you may also receive occasional reader surveys and special offers from
Garden Railways
magazine. Please view our
privacy policy
More great sites from Kalmbach Media
Terms Of Use
|
Privacy Policy
|
Copyright Policy