I bought an Acela and added DCC - it's now anemic with the the speed dropping by about 1/2. The decoder is a Bachmann. Is there anything I can do to get the speed back up or can I only run in DC?
~Kyle
The Mary Lindsay Railroad - Featuring Amtrak Model Trains Your HO Rail Journey Starts Here.........
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CV29 sets the decoder for dual power sensitivity or strictly DCC power sensitivity, and it also sets the speed table. If you want DC and DCC capability, and the decoder is a dual-mode decoder that can operate on DC and on DCC layouts, then use a value of 38. If you only want DCC capability, use 34 as the value in CV29. Either value enables speed steps of 28/128.
-Crandell
Hi!
I've only had DCC for a year, but did an awful lot of research before jumping in with both feet. I have read and heard many times that while it is POSSIBLE to have DCC & DC on the same layout, it is a potential recipe for disaster. I urge you to go one way or the other - preferrably DCC.
Having been in AC (Lionel) and DC for decades, I have found them to be pretty forgiving. DCC, however, is NOT - and just a momentary wrong connection can be very costly.
For what its worth.....
Mobilman44
ENJOY !
Living in southeast Texas, formerly modeling the "postwar" Santa Fe and Illinois Central
A friend of mine here in Arizona mis-wired his layout and was feeding both DCC and DC power to the track at the same time. The result: Over $500 damage to DCC components.
Two burned out CVP AD4 stationary decoders.
One burned out CVP EasyDCC Command Station
Four burned out engine sound decoders.
NEVER put both DCC and DC on the track at the same time!
Absolutely, yes...no dual mode operation concurrently. One or the other, but never both at the same time trying to energize the rails!
And you can operate DC locos on DCC systems (some DCC systems...) using address "00".
Some DCC systems.
And the DC motors will sing and growl like you were skinning them alive when they receive the non-DC signals through the rails.
I hope you haven't damaged anything.
Jeff But it's a dry heat!
May I make an uneducated person's suggestion?
What I would do is put one of the engines you are having a problem with on your programming track. Then use the "use programming track" option on your NCE system to get to the screen where you can set the CVs. Set CV 8 to a value of 8. As I understand the Digitrax instructions this should reset your decoder to the original default values, including the address to 3.
Remove the engine from the programming track and try running it on your DCC main with address 3. If it runs on address 3, you have (hopefully) reset it. Now put it back on the programming track and, when you get to the different programming options, chose the one that I think says "standard programming". There you can change the long address to whatever you want as well as changing the "normal" direction of travel if necessary. Since you have the NCE system, one of the programming options that you will see is the ability to have the engine run on analog as well as DCC, or DCC only. I think the default option is DCC only, but make sure you select this if it isn't. DO NOT ENTER the motor control option, or anything else at this point. What I'd do here is just get out of the programming mode and try running the engine.
Because you have the NCE system, there is no need to worry about CV 29 as all that has been taken care of by the programming.
Now, when you try running that engine, the decoder should allow you to apply the full available voltage to the motor when you select the maximum speed step. And because you have reset the decoder to the default values, you shouldn't have to worry about any mistakes you might have made if you fooled with CV 2, CV 5, or CV 6 (Vstart, Vhigh, and Vmid).
With full available voltage to the motor, that's as fast as the engine will go. And this should be the same speed as what it would have moved if running on DC without the decoder.
(Note that the engine will now not run on DC because you disabled this option with the programming. Also note that I've assumed that the Digitrax decoder has the Vmax default value set to give maximum voltage.)
Hope this works for you.
Regards