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Talked with Tony Train world about breakers, more DCC Woo Woo's

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Talked with Tony Train world about breakers, more DCC Woo Woo's
Posted by cudaken on Thursday, February 12, 2009 11:50 PM

 Little back ground if some has not followed tale of woes. My bench slowly but surely eats Digitrax decoders. I get any where from 20 hours which is way short to 100 hours of run time from them before they become toasted.           

 My command station is a Bachmann E-Z Command, it was short on power for my layout so I added a MRC Power Station 8 that put outs 8 amp's. Every thing was fine for some time, say 6 months before I had my first problem.Tender to engine wire melted on a BLI Sound Engine. Must be a defect right? Then slowly other things started to go bad.

 I have been complaining about this problem for a good 6 months if not longer. Things are not going bad any quicker but it has not gone away either. At first most people thought it was because I was asking my engines to do to much work. So I cut down on the number of cars I pull with one engine. Went from 30 cars to 20 cars, things are still going bad. I am sorry, but I think my PCM Big Boy should be able to pull more than 15 cars, other wise why did I buy a $600.00 engine? (sorry about that rant) It ate it DH 163 decoder the other day.

 With the help of kind folks here, I checked the track voltage and is at 14.5 volts. Pretty much where it should be. So it must be the turnouts, well from what you folks have told me and local club, they are done right. Sigh I was hoping that was the problem.

 While you folks where helping me with the turnout problems, circuit breakers came up. It was guessed and it was right that the only breaker I have is in the power station! I have 3 mains lines with around 200 feet of track. That got to be it! Happy Happy Joy Joy.

 So today I called Tony Train World ready to buy a circuit breaker system and fix my problem! Big Smile Told the person that answered the phone about my problem, hum was the answer. He did not know anything about the MRC booster, so I was passed to the man him self, Tony.

 I then told Tony about my problem. He told me he does not think it is the turnouts, to many amps or lack of breakers. He seems to think there is a problem in either the E Z (they are not fans of Bachmann) or the MRC booster. Either one of them is having a power spike ever onces in a while.

 Anyone here do Electronic Repairs?

  I would like to find someone I trust to test the booster. If I send it back to MRC and tell them it has caused $200.00 in damages between wiring and decoders would they be unbiased?

  If some here can help, I will run the B line on DC and A and C line with just the Bachmann E-Z command.

 Thanks for the coming answers and maybe with some hands on help.

                            DC again? Cuda Ken

 

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Posted by jbinkley60 on Friday, February 13, 2009 3:45 AM

cudaken

 Little back ground if some has not followed tale of woes. My bench slowly but surely eats Digitrax decoders. I get any where from 20 hours which is way short to 100 hours of run time from them before they become toasted.           

 My command station is a Bachmann E-Z Command, it was short on power for my layout so I added a MRC Power Station 8 that put outs 8 amp's. Every thing was fine for some time, say 6 months before I had my first problem.Tender to engine wire melted on a BLI Sound Engine. Must be a defect right? Then slowly other things started to go bad.

 I have been complaining about this problem for a good 6 months if not longer. Things are not going bad any quicker but it has not gone away either. At first most people thought it was because I was asking my engines to do to much work. So I cut down on the number of cars I pull with one engine. Went from 30 cars to 20 cars, things are still going bad. I am sorry, but I think my PCM Big Boy should be able to pull more than 15 cars, other wise why did I buy a $600.00 engine? (sorry about that rant) It ate it DH 163 decoder the other day.

 With the help of kind folks here, I checked the track voltage and is at 14.5 volts. Pretty much where it should be. So it must be the turnouts, well from what you folks have told me and local club, they are done right. Sigh I was hoping that was the problem.

 While you folks where helping me with the turnout problems, circuit breakers came up. It was guessed and it was right that the only breaker I have is in the power station! I have 3 mains lines with around 200 feet of track. That got to be it! Happy Happy Joy Joy.

 So today I called Tony Train World ready to buy a circuit breaker system and fix my problem! Big Smile Told the person that answered the phone about my problem, hum was the answer. He did not know anything about the MRC booster, so I was passed to the man him self, Tony.

 I then told Tony about my problem. He told me he does not think it is the turnouts, to many amps or lack of breakers. He seems to think there is a problem in either the E Z (they are not fans of Bachmann) or the MRC booster. Either one of them is having a power spike ever onces in a while.

 Anyone here do Electronic Repairs?

  I would like to find someone I trust to test the booster. If I send it back to MRC and tell them it has caused $200.00 in damages between wiring and decoders would they be unbiased?

  If some here can help, I will run the B line on DC and A and C line with just the Bachmann E-Z command.

 Thanks for the coming answers and maybe with some hands on help.

                            DC again? Cuda Ken

 

Ken,

I am not sure if you'll find anyone here who can diagnose your booster properly, with the right test equipment.  Hopefully you can.  I generally don't suggest this but in this case I'd suggest you consider the simplier inexpensive approach and see what happens.  Use the tail light solution for your bench.  It is cheap and it may help you correlate troubleshooting the issue.  The bulb will limit the current during short conditions, which will save the decoders.  It will also light up or flash when they occur, which will allow you to correlate with other events  that are going on and you may be able to find the pattern or sequence of events that is causing this, while not blowing any more decoders.

 

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Posted by betamax on Friday, February 13, 2009 4:28 AM
Maybe the subtle hint was "get another DCC system". If there are random power surges, there is not much you can do about it. Repair would probably cost more than the booster is worth. Decoders should last a lot longer than what you are seeing, and something is killing them. Maybe investing in a meter to measure track voltage and current would help to see if something is wrong, like excessive voltage.
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Posted by retsignalmtr on Friday, February 13, 2009 6:56 AM

power spikes can come from your command stations or boosters but they can also come from your homes wiring and your electric companys system. if you don't already have one get a surge protector and plug the units into them instead of the wall outlets. get one with the highest rating you can find. these are recomended for protecting computors, tv's and other sensitive electronic equipment.

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Posted by jrbernier on Friday, February 13, 2009 11:01 AM

Ken,

  My first step would be to get a cheap home computer UPS - I have a 375 VA unit I got got about $30 at Sam's Club, and My DCC power is plugged into it.  If you still have problems, you know that the problem is in the EZ Command or the 8 amp booster.

Both home computers and the DCC command station are plugged into UPS's and I have never had 'surge' issues on any of the above equipment.  With the UPS, you have a battery to get you over low voltage as well.  As far as someone 'looking' at you booster; without the 'failure' hapening right there - I don't think anyone will find a problem.  This is one of the 'gotcha' things about 'intermittent' bugs.

Jim

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Posted by rrinker on Friday, February 13, 2009 1:25 PM

 Keep in mind I don't think the Tony's people were talking about AC line surges here, but rather poor voltage regulation in the booster itself. Although that doesn't explain the stall then smoke. Running things with just the Bachmann unit should help - a short will only have 1 amp through it not 8. If that stops the problem then we still have 2 possible causes - simply shorting with 8 amps, or an actual problem with the MRC booster.

 As for AC surges - I always use surge protectors on my electronic goodies, as a precaution. But they only protect from serious surges - a burst of 200 volts will get through most surge protectors, they often only clamp at 600 or 300 volts. So thos ebig power spikes from lightning, yes. Minor power fluctuations - no. Better quality UPS units will switch to battery on both low and high voltage situations, and that is often in a rather narrow 108-130 volt range - as in, anythong higher or lower and it uses the battery. I doubt the $30 ones do this, at least on the high end. The good ones use the battery to boost low voltage, they don't rely on he battey until the input drops even further.

                                      --Randy

 


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Posted by cudaken on Friday, February 13, 2009 10:59 PM

Power spikes to the booster, that makes some scenes. That could explain why most of the of the time it works fine. Now, the DCC system is plugged into a Surge Master power strip. But, so is the computer, my Mono blocked stereo amps (600 watts a side baby) Sub Woofer Amp and a Spaces Heater! When the heater kicks on or off, I can hear cracking sounds through the speakers (Dalquist DQ 10's in case any of you are audiophiles) when the pre amp is off! (when pre amp is on it filters out the noise)  

 So, spaces heater could be send it own surge to the DCC system. I wish I kept track when I lost decoders. Was it in the cooler times of the year. Lately I have had a rash of problems, but some I am sure I know what has caused them. Like the Old PK 2000 BL 2 that I added a decoder, chassis is still hot and I am 95% sure the wheels hit's the chassis, it has had 3 DH 123's for lunch.

 I will try moving the spaces heater off the surge protector to a different outlet.

 By the way what is a UPS, is that a battery back up for computers?

 I have been wanting to pull the trigger for some time on a different DCC command system. Pretty much spent the extra $ cash I had on decoders. Not ones that got BBQ, but up grading my DC fleet to DCC.

 On the decder melting in the PCM Big Boy! It had a right, installed a new decoder and darn thing is locked up!

  Thanks for all the answers, and speical thanks to Randy and Jim. 

 Time to turn out the light, listen to some good jazz and look for %^&#+!$ sparks.

              Cuda Ken   

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Posted by blownout cylinder on Friday, February 13, 2009 11:18 PM

retsignalmtr

power spikes can come from your command stations or boosters but they can also come from your homes wiring and your electric companys system. if you don't already have one get a surge protector and plug the units into them instead of the wall outlets. get one with the highest rating you can find. these are recomended for protecting computors, tv's and other sensitive electronic equipment.

I'd agree with resignalmtr on this--go right to those outlets and get surge protection in there--the higher the better--we've put them in our layout and haven't had any power issues since---

120 volt does not always register 120--it could be 104 to 132V then again it could do even weirder things.

Edit; Cuda-You may want to completely isolate all your power supplies in your case--the heater and your monoblocks draw enough current that they could very well create their own surge as you already noticed--isolate the circuits--monoblock in one, your power supplies in their own.

Any argument carried far enough will end up in Semantics--Hartz's law of rhetoric Emerald. Leemer and Southern The route of the Sceptre Express Barry

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Posted by cacole on Saturday, February 14, 2009 9:17 AM

Another thing to look at is your own house and neighboring users who might have large electric motors cycling on and off, such as air compressors, freezers, refrigerators, heat pumps, and other high amperage devices that can cause voltage spikes and brownouts when they turn on and off, especially if you're all on one power company transformer.

Heavy duty surge protectors would help alleviate some of these problems.  Don't be chintzy here and get a cheapo surge protector from Wal-mart -- you need a good, heavy duty one from a more reputable manufacturer than the one that isn't even UL certified that Wal-mart would have.

Sometimes even the power company's local transformer can become overloaded or develop problems that cause voltage fluctuations that would destroy electronics devices without good surge protection.

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Posted by betamax on Saturday, February 14, 2009 12:27 PM

I don 't think that a UPS (uninterruptible power supply) is the solution. Surge protectors, most of them will only absorb spikes, they are not too helpful with sags and power bumps.

There is a high likelihood that the DCC system is to blame here. The difference between cheap electronics and expensive electronics is the amount of engineering that went into them. Cheap ones omit a lot of things, and use cheaper parts, that will have an impact, but most people don't notice it.

If the decoders are being damaged, there is something going on between the booster and the decoder. Could it be that the booster does not have good regulation, or the power supply it came with isn't very good?

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Posted by cudaken on Saturday, February 14, 2009 10:49 PM

blownout cylinder
we've put them in our layout and haven't had any power issues since---

 Blowout, what kind did you use and what problems where you having?

 Far as cost, I know a good power enhancer (term used in the Audiophile world) is not cheap. A used Adcom 515 on E-bay is $125.00 to $200.00.

 As you folks know, the real question is what is the real problem? Spikes from the power supply to the command system or to the booster. Or is the spikes coming from the booster or command satation, or is Tony total off base and it is in the turnouts?

            Cuda Ken

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Posted by cudaken on Saturday, February 14, 2009 11:01 PM

 Jeff, would you post a few details again on the Tail Light solution? How would I wire it, like a car with a ground or staright threw the bulb. One for each main line or just one from the booster.

                Cuda Ken 

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Posted by jbinkley60 on Sunday, February 15, 2009 3:44 AM

cudaken

 Jeff, would you post a few details again on the Tail Light solution? How would I wire it, like a car with a ground or staright threw the bulb. One for each main line or just one from the booster.

                Cuda Ken 

Ken,

This method simply involves wiring an 1156 automotive tail light bulb in between the booster and the track you are trying to protect.  You wire the bulb in series with one of the booster outputs (A or B).  The other side of the bulb goes to the track.  The idea is that the bulb will act as a current limiter of a couple of amps (which should be fine for a bench) and will also light up if there is a short, so you will have a quick visual reference to troubleshoot.  Basically it's an inexpensive electronic circuit breaker. 

Allan Gartner is a big proponent of this solution.  You can find more on his site at: 

http://www.wiringfordcc.com/track.htm

 

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Posted by blownout cylinder on Sunday, February 15, 2009 9:15 AM

cudaken

blownout cylinder
we've put them in our layout and haven't had any power issues since---

 Blowout, what kind did you use and what problems where you having?

 Far as cost, I know a good power enhancer (term used in the Audiophile world) is not cheap. A used Adcom 515 on E-bay is $125.00 to $200.00.

 As you folks know, the real question is what is the real problem? Spikes from the power supply to the command system or to the booster. Or is the spikes coming from the booster or command satation, or is Tony total off base and it is in the turnouts?

            Cuda Ken

Cuda- some of the problems were associated with trains just stopping. We had one burnt out decoder and , if I remember rightly, an issue with a SW1200 just bogging out--and that now that I remember seems to have tipped me to think about circuits in the house. Because the loco would bog down everytime the freezer clicked on.

What we got were/are APC's line of protectors--and these do tend to deal with bumps and stuff--at least we don't notice anything quite along that line that Betamax talks about. One could get line conditioners as well that do handle stuff like that.

Everything mentioned in this thread is implicated in one way or another in these issues. If I lived in a rural area that could get involved too, because it does seem that rural areas do not seem to be as stable in the line voltage as here. I have a couple of people I know that have checked their lines and seen variations of anything from 98V to 148V with dips going as low as 87V to as high as 165V. So I'm not so sure that we can quite toss out household circuitry or even regional circuitry. The cleaner/stabler the power coming into the house the less likely the issues would be burnt out circuits. Burnouts of that sort are usually associated with power spikes and unless one can find a way to isolate the power transformer and decoders etc from ANY source of external power you'd have to also deal with external issues as well.

Any argument carried far enough will end up in Semantics--Hartz's law of rhetoric Emerald. Leemer and Southern The route of the Sceptre Express Barry

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Posted by rrinker on Sunday, February 15, 2009 1:11 PM

 Here's why my thinking is it's the DCC system and not the AC power lines. Notice Ken has some fancy audiophile gear, and I'm sure he has other electronics - obviously a computer and probably a tv or two. If his AC line is that bad with surges and spikes, I'm sure some of the other equipment woudl ALSO be experiencing failures. His DCC system is nominally putting 14.5 volts to the track, to get that to exceed a Digitrax decoder's absolute maximum of 22 volts would take quite an impressive surge on the AC input side.

 The lightbulb method may work but it's not absolute protection. At least it will be obvious if a short occurs on the track. The downside is that 2.5 amps will still flow through that short - possibly still allowing the decoder to be damaged if a short is what is causing the problem. Still, it's a whole lot better than 8 amps going through it, and certainly a step in the right direction. Dick Bronson has a slightly modified version of this on his RR-CirKits page which allows an initial short at 2.5 amps but cuts it down to .4 amps after a short delay. ANd it's almost as simple as just the light bulb - the PTC fuse he uses costs like 50 cents. http://www.rr-cirkits.com/Notebook/short.html

                                           --Randy

 


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Posted by blownout cylinder on Sunday, February 15, 2009 5:48 PM

davidmbedard

 Sorry Cudaken, but.....

I told you so..........

.....about 2 years ago when I was asking you why you were running 8 amps with your DCC system.  I suggested going with something of quality, but you stuck with the MRC unit...........

David B

Dave how stable is/are MRC units anyways? The problems I'm hearing about sound like spiking and if that is so then-----?

Randy, you may be right but my experience was that that may not necessarily be so. I have a couple of monoblock tube amps in my house that are over 20 years old and have worked even in places in the country where spikes, drops, brown outs and all manner of stuff occur and still have not blown anything, as well any other pieces of equipment don't pop like those. I'm always finding that you can't always say it is one OR the other. With my decoder in the SW1200 for example it would go south when the freezer clicked on. We put the whole train layout on another circuit --put a line condx/surge bar on line and no problems after that. And this was over at a friends layout--I've since done this on my own with same  results. Makes one wonder sometimes is all---Confused

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Posted by jim22 on Sunday, February 15, 2009 8:23 PM

 Ken,

  You mentioned running part of your layout on DC.  Are you sure that the DCC and DC are not getting tangled up together somewhere?  That might create some spectacular failures as the two power sources would try to over power each other. 

  Other than that, I suppose it's possible your booster could be misbehaving, but the things that really destroy decoders are output shorts, like a motor lead getting shorted to a rail or to the other motor lead, or light outputs getting shorted to the common return or each other.  Is there any chance that wires are getting loose and bumping into conductive stuff inside the locomotives?  Pinched wires?  Uninsulated solder joints?  Unisolated or poorly isolated motors?  If this is one or two engines in particular, maybe the motors are taking too much current in stall, possibly bad motors.

  You might look into TCS decoders.  I am too embarrassed to send them decoders that I smoked in sheer stupidity, but I think they have a goof-proof warranty and would replace a decoder with an unexplained failure.  Besides, I really like their decoders.

   Also, some decoders are rated for more current than others.  You might need a heavier-duty decoder for a particular engine.

Jim

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Posted by cudaken on Sunday, February 15, 2009 10:25 PM

 Randy, 8 amps is not the problem, it is when the 8 amps are out of control, then there a problem. If I was not having a short, spike or just over taxed my engines then 8 amp should not cause a problem. I don't see any reason to think if there is a short, spike or over taxing my engines 5 amps would be more forgiving than 8 amps when decoders max is 2 amps peak. 

 Now this "something of quality" thing is something new you have added Randy. As far as I can remember you never said MRC is junk, just that it was to much power. If you have warned MRC lacks quality in there gear I would have but me heed to your warring's.

 Jim, I wish it could be that simple! But, my bench main lines are completely isolated from each other with plastic rail joiners on both sides of the rails where they interconect. Politary is correct and there is no problem when a engines crosses over to the other main. All the track is still DCC power, I have not hooked up the DC power supply to the B line yet.

 Randy and the other fine person that brought up the tail light fix again, thank you for the links. After reading the links I understand the fix better.

 Barry, a fellow audiophile! Are you a Mac Man? With the power my DQ 10's demand, I am soild state usining Adcom 555's bridge mono. I thought the DQ sounded good with a mer 200 watts a side, then I went mono blocked, it was turly hearing them for the first time after owing them for 21 years.

 Thanks for all the great efforts from the kind folks here.

                        Ken

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Posted by rrinker on Monday, February 16, 2009 7:41 AM

 You are right about the amps, in a way. 5 directly applied would fry a decoder just as easily as 8, although since when teh breaker in teh booster trips, it SHOULD pulse on, if there's still a short, trip, rather quickly. I'm not sure how well the one in the MRC booster works. No, it's not 'junk' but I wouldn't rate it as high as a Digitrax, NCE, or CVP booster. It could be that it doesn't trip fast enough. A good test is the 'quarter test' - another reason the booster might not trip is if your wiring is not adequate and a decoder shorting across the tracks via the loco wheels only draws 7 amps - plenty to fry the decoder and melt plasctic but since it's less than the booster's 8 amps the breaker never trips! The quarter test will cost you 25 cents. Set a quarter on the rails, testing various parts of the track. If you set the quarter on the track and the booster trips, you're good. If it doesn't, you need to check the booster to be sure it works properly, and assumign that is the case, check the wiring - you may not be using heavy enough wire, or have enough track feeders connected to the bus. You shouldn't have to push down on the quarter,

                                             --Randy

 


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Posted by cacole on Monday, February 16, 2009 7:55 AM

 And if the booster doesn't trip fast enough, 8 Amps ought to be just about enough to weld the quarter to the rail.

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Posted by betamax on Monday, February 16, 2009 6:38 PM

The current capability of the booster is not the issue. The total current that flows is only that which is demanded by the load. If it only wants 1 amp, then the power supply supplies 1 amp, no more, no less.

If decoders are burning out, the probable cause is excessive current flow. A slow increase in current will not trigger any protection circuits in a booster. What could be causing that is a voltage drop as you move away from the booster. Or the booster has poor regulation, which causes the voltage to drop under load, and to satisfy Kirchoff, the current increases.

What needs to happen is a check of the power being put to the track as well as the wiring. Old DC wiring can cause problems too, by introducing a voltage drop. And the result is more current again.

Does the circuit breaker system work correctly (ye olde quarter trick)? Things like taillights being used as protection will also mess this up. Not to mention that the bright light may obscure your view of a smoking decoder. Excessive current over time will simply cause the decoder to get too hot, which will shorten the lifespan of the decoder. It isn't a spectacular failure, but it will occur in the future. Smoking decoders are much easier to diagnose than those that "just die".

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Posted by cudaken on Monday, February 16, 2009 11:24 PM

 Randy, if you are ever near Maryville IL you have a places to stay for free.You have really tried to help and I appreciate the effort.

 On the wires, the runs are long due to the fact when I was wiring the then Slot Car / Train layout I only knew slot car track wiring. Plus I sit pretty far away from the bench and where I sit is where the command station and booster sit. Wires from the booster are 12 gage good quality speaker wire, around $1.00 per foot and 14 foot run and two sets of them. It started out as a 2 line blocked DC, I hooked A and B line wires to the booster and polarity is correct. (Real good stuff for my DQ 10 speakers is $16.00 per foot.) The wires from the booster go to 4 terminal strips. 2 strips are for the A line and 2 for the B line, each line has inside and outside strips for that line. By C line was hooked to the B line strips.

 Now this is where it gets messy. Remember, when I wired this I did not know about this great site or K-10 Model Trains was around. Feeder wires are 14 gage, but there is no bus wires. I ran wires from the strips to where they where solder to the rails. Some wires runs are a good 27 feet long. For slot cars, that was fine, I have some really nasty and fast cars but none will come to 1.5 amp draw by them self. I have feeders about every 6 foot.   

 Before you say the wiring is the problem and it could very well be! When the Bachmann E-Z only ran the the B line (A line was DC for 6 months or so before I got the booster) its breaker would kick in fast when there was a derail. When the E-Z was only running the B line it could power 3 sound BLI steam engines with some effort and 2 where easy. It was not till I made the A line DCC that I need the booster.

 I guess the first thing I need to do is test the booster tripping on the bench.

                                      Ken

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Posted by rrinker on Tuesday, February 17, 2009 6:53 AM

 Only if I get to drive the Cuda Big Smile

Definitely do the quarter test and make sure the MRC booster trips fast liek the Bachmann did. It sounds like the B line is probably OK if the bachmann tripped out quickly there, but if you've made any changes since then, test it as well. If you could run 2 and sometimes 3 BLI locos with the bachmann alone on the B line, but not run the same locos on the A line - there may well be wiring issues. The locos certainly don;t draw more power just because they are on a different piece of track. Now obviously if you ran 3 on B line and tried to run three MORE on the A line, there's be power issues with the 1 amp system, but JUST those 3 that ran fine on B should also run on A with the same power supply.

#14 might be pushing it a bit at 27 feet but if you have them every 6 feet of track you should have plenty of power. Not sure I want to know how you soldered wire as heavy as #14 to HO scale track though.. Big Smile

                                                   --Randy

 


Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's

 

Visit my web site at www.readingeastpenn.com for construction updates, DCC Info, and more.

  • Member since
    May 2002
  • From: Reno,NV
  • 56 posts
Posted by skir4d on Tuesday, February 17, 2009 4:43 PM

The book says at 120 volts ac #14 is good for 45 feet at 10 amp for less than a 2% voltage drop, so I think Ken is safe.

Ken, can you tell me if the decoders actually get hot before failure or do they just fail?

Getting hot suggests an overload condition (for some reason) and just dying with no outside evidence of same suggests a spike frying its poor little brain, or perhaps confusing the decoder.

Shorts may be a solution, but the short has to be on the motor side of the decoder vice the track side, all its going to see if the track side shorts is its input voltage going to zero. Motor side short will cook it in a heartbeat. The spike from an incident of track side shorting might fry its little brain, however.

Doubt its AC flunctuation as the filtering inherent in an AC to DC recitifer would smooth most of that out, if properly designed and built. Note that a surge may have damaged enough of the power supply to let smaller surges through but not totally incapacited the unit. Thus what might not have caused a problem might now be causing a problem.

Solution would be put a power quality monitor ont he output of the command station and see if there are transient spikes over time. Don't have anything to do that here.

Jack W-NV0W

Tonopah and Palisade Railroad
  • Member since
    February 2002
  • From: Reading, PA
  • 30,002 posts
Posted by rrinker on Tuesday, February 17, 2009 6:54 PM

 Actually, the WORST short there can be would connect one side of the motor to the track - pretty much instantly smokes any decoder. Say if the motor is grounded to the chassis, and the loco derails and it pushes a wheel up in contact with the underside of the chassis - poof. It shouldn't be a problem in even old Blue Box Athearns if the install instructions are followed (which includes isolating the motor from the chassis), but there are othe rexamples of 'needs help', in paricular the P2K Alco switchers, they ahve an orange wire attached to the lower motor brush - the other end of which is screwed to the metal chassis. Oops.

                                              --Randy

 


Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's

 

Visit my web site at www.readingeastpenn.com for construction updates, DCC Info, and more.

  • Member since
    May 2002
  • From: Reno,NV
  • 56 posts
Posted by skir4d on Wednesday, February 18, 2009 10:08 AM

Randy;

I agree. As I said in my post any short on the motor side of the decoder will almost instantly let the magic smoke out of the decoder, including any shorts in the lights that may be powered by the decoder. No amount of breakers, fuses, or other current limiting devices on the track side of the decoder can eliminate that issue, as the decoder acts as a very expensive, very fast acting fuse in those situations. Those devices are intended to protect the command station or power supply, not the decoder and the motor.

The problem that I have is the electronics in the command station are just as sensitive as those in the decoder, so a spike that affects the decoder by creating an overpotential situation should also affect the command station, as the spike has to get through that electronics first.

Ken, after thinking about this overnight I have two suggestions for you.

1) Remove the space heaters from that surge protector and place them, if at all posible, on another wall outlet. The fact that your audio equipment picks up the hash from their on and off operations tells me that they produce a sizable signal and you want them on the supply side of that supressor, not the load side. If this has been suggested before I apologize for repeating it. This will also allow some of the hash to dissipate, although not all of them.

2) Buy a ammeter and monitor them power draw of your loco's, just to insure you are not pulling to much power. This is a good method of monitoring the overall health of your loco and can help identify binding and other issues before it costs you a decoder. Just good insurance.

Jack W

Tonopah and Palisade Railroad

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