Dr. Frankendiesel aka Scott Running BearSpace Mouse for president!15 year veteran fire fighterCollector of Apple //e'sRunning Bear EnterprisesHistory Channel Club life member.beatus homo qui invenit sapientiam
Vail and Southwestern RR wrote: froggy wrote:The first time I had a reverse loop and I took the crossovers out and I do believe I have another reverse loop.I thought DCC didn't matter with reverse loops and switches.Reverse loops absolutley matter in DCC. The good thing is that they can be completely automated. Looking at the pics, I think there probably is a reverse loop, but I have to stare a while longer to try to describe where!
froggy wrote:The first time I had a reverse loop and I took the crossovers out and I do believe I have another reverse loop.I thought DCC didn't matter with reverse loops and switches.
Reverse loops absolutley matter in DCC. The good thing is that they can be completely automated. Looking at the pics, I think there probably is a reverse loop, but I have to stare a while longer to try to describe where!
A wider angle shot, or more of an overall view would be better.
Rotor
Jake: How often does the train go by? Elwood: So often you won't even notice ...
Jeff But it's a dry heat!
froggy wrote:Tomorrow I will take complete pics of the whole thing and send them to your email.Hopefully you will put them on this forum for me.
Sure will.
Can you post a pic of the layout as it is now?
How are the feeders hooked up?
You might try acquiring the other loco using the addy you programmed and see if that works.
Glad you got one going.
Try addy 3 on your DCC trains to see if they respond...sometimes they don't take the programming.
If that doesn't work, I'd try a decoder reset to see if that gets them going.
If you only have one feeder, or "power wire", it pretty much shoots down my crossed feeder theory.
Has your track plan changed since the pics of your layout were posted?
Did you fix the reverse loop you had? If not, there's your short!
Froggy...the problem with the "dead" track is probably just a feeder crossed up. Disconnect each feeder one at a time, and check the layout each time. When the track runs, swap the wire on the last feeder and the track should run.
On the DCC locos not running...maybe a decoder reset? Did you reprogram the loco addys? If so, did you try aquiring the loco with the new addy? Or try addy "03" to see if the loco "took" the reprogram.
Ok....
I think we need a lot more info. How do you have the power hooked from the DCC unit to the track? And, do you have a Volt/Ohm meter?
froggy wrote:My program traqck is isolated from the rest of it and it has wires going to the program track that are labeled for it.The main track wires also go to the part labeled main track.Any way when I treid to use the track for DC, the powerpack showed an overload. Do ya think a switch or two are screwing me up?The points are all in the same direction.
I use a DPDT switch to isolate each system. Only one can work at a time and they cannot be in contact with the track at the same time.
I would disconnect the DC power pack and see if the DCC system works.
Bill
Does your programming track work? Test the loco on your programming track. As for your mainline it does sound like a short. Check all trackwork for tools laying around. It's easy to forget something you've left laying on the track. If this is your first time with wiring a power buss you have more then likely just crossed your power feed drops. It happens, I've done it and will again. If you do not find something laying on the track shorting it out. Try removing some of the power feeds from your power bus, one at a time. Once you remove the shorted track sections power feed the short will vanish. But by removing the feeds one at a time you will know what section you need to examine more closely.
As a test disconnect the wiring from your mainline and your control system. With no power to the track, take a volt-ohm meter set for ohms and touch both test leads to the track power feed wires. If you get a zero ohms reading the track has a short.
You may want to check into some sort of short protection. I have seen a setup made from an automotive light bulb wired into the power drop feeds. The current drew does not make the bulb glow under normal conditions but it glows brightly when a short in present in that power feed or the trackage it feeds power to.
Johnnny_reb Once a word is spoken it can not be unspoken!
My Train Page My Photobucket Page My YouTube Channel
I think what Jay is getting at, if I may speak for him at this point (if he doesn't return for some time), is that you still have to have the separated programming track able to receive the DCC signal, so you need a switch of some kind. Also, if you are trying to programme a decoder, some DCC systems need a resistor across the track, or a special power output booster, to get the decoder to hear the programming inputs. I don't know enough about the MRC to say that it is one of them.
Hang in there before you do much....someone will help out.
Jay
C-415 Build: https://imageshack.com/a/tShC/1
Other builds: https://imageshack.com/my/albums