At the moment I have all battery motive power. Steam is still just a dream, one day...ahhhh. Track power was never an option as I wanted my railway to blend into the landscape and take on the look of a typical narrow gauge light railway.
Rechargeable cells have gone down in price and up in quality, which makes them all the more economical!
A very loud Yey!
The Home of Articulated Ugliness
I say yay. Living in the Southwest Phoenix to be exact, It was brought about belonging to a club with over 1500 ft of track to run on and having only the fall thru spring able to run for weather reasons. Too HOT!!! It is nice to be able come out, place equipment on track, turn on power switch and go. I have converted most of my motive power over to battery, some with receivers in locomotives other in battery car behind. For the big brutes am using gell cells with ball bearing equiped trailing cars. All r/c equip is Aristo. both 27 and 75 mhz on board receivers. Everything works as advertized, but have found that antenna placement does affect range. Good luck converting.
Bob
I Personaly Don't use battery power bec. of the cost. but if i could have bought it i would have. exspecialy since i now have a wirig nightmare on my hands.
My thoughts would be maybe you could set up one of the loops, to be activated by track power, but not all the spur lines, or the entire main line.
And Use battery power to run your engines, but when others come over, they could run on the powered section.
Just My thoughs
Philip
I am a RCS type of guy but any remote control with batteries will alow you to run track power and battery on the same track. I am all battery power but I leave one loop of track so track power can be run for visitors. This can be a solution for your problem. I have also installed a complete RCS system in a boxcar as a trailer car. The output from the throttle plugged into the lighting jack on the back of an LGB engine. It work fine. Of course the track pick-ups on the engine were disconnected. This is so the power does not feed to the rails.
7/8th scale when size matters!
John Foley
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