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Problems with a Loksound Select Decoder

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Posted by richhotrain on Friday, January 15, 2016 10:59 AM

maxman

You can always go back and add something to the title, such as (Not!) or (Resolved).

 

As Troy Aikman says, I don't dwell in the past.  Laugh

Rich

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Posted by maxman on Friday, January 15, 2016 9:38 AM

You can always go back and add something to the title, such as (Not!) or (Resolved).

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Posted by richhotrain on Friday, January 15, 2016 7:32 AM

hon30critter

Rich:

I'm not sure if you know this, but you can edit the title of the thread. Just go back to your original post and click on 'Edit' and you will see that the title can be changed as well as the text.

Dave

 

Thanks, Dave.

Yeah, I knew that I could that, but I decided not to since it reflected my original concern that something was amiss with the decoder.

Rich

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Posted by hon30critter on Friday, January 15, 2016 5:23 AM

Rich:

I'm not sure if you know this, but you can edit the title of the thread. Just go back to your original post and click on 'Edit' and you will see that the title can be changed as well as the text.

Dave

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Posted by richhotrain on Friday, January 15, 2016 4:48 AM

I should make one final comment about this thread. In retrospect, I regret the title, Problems with a LokSound Select decoder. Turned out, it was not the decoder at all, it was the speaker. 

Rich

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Posted by fieryturbo on Thursday, January 14, 2016 3:21 PM

I had a problem exactly like this in 2 locos I was testing on DCC.  It was a result of too much resistance in the track.  After I put an ammeter on it, I discovered that there is a surge draw, especially when the horn is blown.

Check your track for poor connections, dirt, damage, dirty wheels, dirty/bad motor, or anything that may cause more current to be drawn.

Julian

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Posted by richhotrain on Thursday, January 14, 2016 4:49 AM

richhotrain

Got a message from Intermountain today.  A new speaker is on the way. The newer F unit baffle is also be included with the new speaker. I am told that the sound should be "obnoxiously loud" with this new combination. Stay tuned.

Rich

 

richhotrain

Got a message from Intermountain today.  A new speaker is on the way. The newer F unit baffle is also be included with the new speaker. I am told that the sound should be "obnoxiously loud" with this new combination. Stay tuned.

Rich

 

Finally got the new speaker on Tuesday afternoon and installed it yesterday. The volume is loud enough that it needs to be toned down.

Despite Intermountain's best efforts to provide me with a quality speaker setup, I still encountered problems with the installation. Along with the new speaker, the technician also sent a different baffle, but I wound up using the initial baffle that had been sent to me in December.  

I am not sure why the speaker does not fit tight into the baffle, but it doesn't.  I needed to add a gasket to push the back of the speaker up into the baffle. Even then, I had to wrap electrical tape around the edges of the baffle to totally seal it and provide a better seal for louder volume. But, all's well that ends well.

Rich

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Posted by hon30critter on Friday, January 1, 2016 4:58 PM

That has been my experience with Intermountain too.

Dave

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Posted by richhotrain on Friday, January 1, 2016 6:18 AM

Motley

Very nice, glad to hear Intermountain is taking care of you on this.

 

The communication and customer service at Intermountain has been top notch.  Good people over there.

Rich

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Posted by Motley on Thursday, December 31, 2015 8:21 PM

Very nice, glad to hear Intermountain is taking care of you on this.

Michael


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Posted by richhotrain on Thursday, December 31, 2015 5:58 PM

Got a message from Intermountain today.  A new speaker is on the way. The newer F unit baffle is also be included with the new speaker. I am told that the sound should be "obnoxiously loud" with this new combination. Stay tuned.

Rich

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Posted by rrinker on Wednesday, December 30, 2015 10:18 PM

Pretty good deal, actually - less than the price difference between the no sound and the sound one, I think. Price difference is usually $100 for most brands of locos.

                      --Randy

 


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Posted by richhotrain on Wednesday, December 30, 2015 12:02 PM

rrinker

 You can't get much more drop in replacement than this, using the very same components the same loco was available equipped with right from the factory, plus having even the non-sound version chassis already set up for the speaker and decoder mounting. 

 

You're right, Randy, and that was my point in starting that other thread. It someone owns an Intermountain F-unit without sound, this drop in decoder and speaker is user friendly and affordable.

Rich

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Posted by rrinker on Wednesday, December 30, 2015 11:47 AM

 You can't get much more drop in replacement than this, using the very same components the same loco was available equipped with right from the factory, plus having even the non-sound version chassis already set up for the speaker and decoder mounting. Just bad luck on getting a defective speaker.

                           --Randy

 


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Posted by richhotrain on Wednesday, December 30, 2015 4:43 AM

hon30critter

Having thought about Rich's situation and the comments that have been made, perhaps the smartest route would be to test the speaker before doing anything else.

I think that I lulled myself into a false sense of complacency in this particular instance. This was an up and running loco with a non-sound decoder that I had previously installed. The Intermountain tech assured me that the sound decoder would be nothing more than a drop in procedure, which it was.

The anticipated installation turned out to be so easy that I gave no thought to a component failure. Installed the decoder and speaker, programmed the long address, and placed it on the layout. Instantly heard sound, turned on the lights (headlight, Mars light, numberboards) and all worked, started the loco moving, yeah baby.

The one problem was that the horn volume was very low. Then, I noticed that the sound would cut out when I pressed the F2 button. So, my first thought was a defective decoder since the speaker seemed to be working. That's when I started this thread.

I had no way to test the decoder, so my only option was to find a replacement speaker and try that. Luckily, the speaker turned out to be the problem. So, now, I just have to get the properly sized replacement speaker.

Rich

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Posted by rrinker on Tuesday, December 29, 2015 8:28 PM

 I hard wire all of mine, too, but that hard wiring usually involves a connector of some sort. One of these days I'll do something too small to have a connector - but even in my 44 tonner I used the MC2 from TCS, which has a very small connector instead of the rather large 9 pin JST type most all my other locos have. That means I'd have to get another MC2 decoder to try a swap in that one. There will be cases where the only way to swap is to break out the soldering iron, or cut the wires and splice in a new decoder. But so far I've never had a DOA one, nor had any fail after install.

                          --Randy

 


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Posted by hon30critter on Tuesday, December 29, 2015 8:09 PM

Randy:

In my case I have hard wired all of my decoders to date so I was going on faith by not testing them first. Swapping out a hard wired decoder isn't as easy as a direct replacement obviously. I foolishly removed a decoder in a very tiny critter a while ago because I thought it was toast. Turned out that it was me not putting in the correct address. The decoder was fine, but I did so much damage to the critter's shell that I had to order a second kit to get it back together. I still haven't fixed it because I get so annoyed every time I pick the thing up.

Having thought about Rich's situation and the comments that have been made, perhaps the smartest route would be to test the speaker before doing anything else.

Dave

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Posted by richhotrain on Tuesday, December 29, 2015 2:01 PM

DigitalGriffin

 

 
richhotrain

A couple of the guys mentioned the possibility of a blown amp on the decoder. Had that been the problem, is there a way to test for such an issue?

Rich

 

 

 

 

If you have sound with the new speaker, you don't have a blown amp.  Simple as that.

 

ahh, OK, I didn't know that. So, that being the case, we could have eliminated the decoder days ago since the old speaker had sound.  It was just that the sound cut out when the loco was in motion.  That made the speaker the likely culprit from the outset.

Rich

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Posted by DigitalGriffin on Tuesday, December 29, 2015 12:22 PM

richhotrain

A couple of the guys mentioned the possibility of a blown amp on the decoder. Had that been the problem, is there a way to test for such an issue?

Rich

 

 

If you have sound with the new speaker, you don't have a blown amp.  Simple as that.

Don - Specializing in layout DC->DCC conversions

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Posted by richhotrain on Tuesday, December 29, 2015 11:50 AM

A couple of the guys mentioned the possibility of a blown amp on the decoder. Had that been the problem, is there a way to test for such an issue?

Rich

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Posted by rrinker on Tuesday, December 29, 2015 11:19 AM

hon30critter

Wow!

5 days and 65 replies to figure out that the speaker is bad!

Please understand that I'm not being critical at all. In fact, the back and forth was very interesting. However, several people, myself included, jumped to the conclusion that the decoder was messed up. This is one situation where a decoder tester would have come in handy. I built one which has a motor and a speaker but I never use it. Perhaps I should start.

Dave

 

 Depends on where you are at with installations. First installs, you tend to not have spare parts to swap for testing. In the early days I built a decoder tester. And promptly tossed it in a drawer and never touched it again. I keep eying the Loksound decoder tester, but think about how I never used to one I built for just a few dollars in parts. I have enough spare parts and extras now that it's no big deal do twap in another decoder to see if the problem is the decoder, or grab another speaker and try that. Thiose are the things I would have tried, but I have the spare parts available. After a few installs it's easy to build up a supply of spares (plus the fact that I use only 2 types of decoders - I actually have spare decoders. I'm not so worried about Loksound ones - they can always be updated to the latest firmware easily enough, but if TCS adds features, the ones I have are stuck).

                  --Randy

 


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Posted by Motley on Tuesday, December 29, 2015 8:17 AM

Aha some very good troubleshooting on this. I had no idea it could be the speaker I either, so I'm surprised as well.

In any case, at least we finally figured it out.

Let us know what Intermountain says.

Michael


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Posted by richhotrain on Tuesday, December 29, 2015 5:58 AM

Ed, that is interesting stuff about speakers and speaker failures.

I have never done a sound decoder install, just non-sound decoder installs. I would never have attempted this one, but once the Intermountain tech described it as a drop-in install, I thought, what the heck.  

The installation went so smoothly that I never expected any follow-up problems. As I previously mentioned, this has been a real learning experience. I wonder what specifically was wrong with that speaker.

Rich

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Posted by gmpullman on Tuesday, December 29, 2015 5:14 AM

gmpullman
Many of the OEM speakers and even the ESU ones that come with the decoders I set aside and use only as a last resort.

I've done about forty sound decoder installs.

Number of bad decoders: 0 — Number of bad speakers: 3!

Add to that the three sound locomotives I purchased from Ebay sellers for bargain prices due to poor (or no) sound and when I got them the first thing I did was try a known good speaker — you guessed it.

Well, I'm glad you finally pin pointed the cause, Rich. The failure rate must be pretty high on these little speakers.

One thing I have learned, though, is to protect the speaker until the very last moments before installation so it can not pick up the least little speck of iron filing or other ferrous gunk! That will kill the voice coil travel in a heartbeat.

In one of my threads maybe a year ago I was looking for a very thin fabric, somewhat like grille cloth but much finer, to seal the holes in the bottom of a tender frame in order to keep out the ferrous gunk.

So, just like any lamps or LEDs you're going to install in a locomotive — test them first!

I mentioned the MP3 player I use but a plain old radio will work if you use the earphone jack and get a cheap pair of ear buds and cut them off to use the cord with the 1/8" plug. Don't overdrive the speaker but at least you will get an idea of the sound quality.

I'm sure Intermountain will send you another speaker but... if it were my choice, I'd go with one of the Railmaster models... just my 2¢

Regards, Ed

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Posted by richhotrain on Tuesday, December 29, 2015 4:50 AM

hon30critter

Wow!

5 days and 65 replies to figure out that the speaker is bad!

Please understand that I'm not being critical at all. In fact, the back and forth was very interesting. However, several people, myself included, jumped to the conclusion that the decoder was messed up. This is one situation where a decoder tester would have come in handy. I built one which has a motor and a speaker but I never use it. Perhaps I should start.

Dave

Dave, I know exactly what you mean. All of the replies and suggestions were great, but it was frustrating for me because I was unable to eliminate any of the three possibilities: corrupt sound file, bad decoder, or speaker. 
 
The last thing that I wanted to do was to send back the sound kit (decoder, speaker, and baffle) to Intermountain without even knowing the cause. So, I tried to use common sense. In my mind, the least likely of the three was the sound file. It just seemed to me that speaker failure or decoder failure was more likely than a corrupt sound file.
 
I had no way to test a sound decoder, although I do have a non-sound decoder tester. Since the loco motor worked fine, and the lights worked fine, if it was the decoder, it was likely to be a blown amp. But the prime mover and diesel horn sounded good, so I figured it must be the speaker. Turned out it was.
 
Rich

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Posted by hon30critter on Tuesday, December 29, 2015 1:07 AM

Wow!

5 days and 65 replies to figure out that the speaker is bad!

Please understand that I'm not being critical at all. In fact, the back and forth was very interesting. However, several people, myself included, jumped to the conclusion that the decoder was messed up. This is one situation where a decoder tester would have come in handy. I built one which has a motor and a speaker but I never use it. Perhaps I should start.

Dave

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Posted by richhotrain on Monday, December 28, 2015 10:34 PM

The Radio Shack speaker is 29mm, but it is slightly too big to fit in the chassis mount which is intended to hold a 28mm speaker. So, I will need to contact Intermountain to get the correct size replacement speaker.

I did check the LokSound manual, and it indicated that an 8 ohm speaker would be acceptable although the volume might be slightly lower.  I wanted to check before putting in that Radio Shack speaker. 

The only reason that I got that Radio Shack speaker is that it was immediately available, and I really wanted to test the speaker before sending both the speaker and decoder back to Intermountain. I am glad that I did since I now know that the decoder is good.

Rich

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Posted by Mark R. on Monday, December 28, 2015 9:19 PM

ESU decoders are designed to work optimally with 4 ohm speakers. However, using 8 or 16 ohm speakers is not a problem.

I've never tried a 16 ohm speaker, but I've noticed very little difference in volume between a 4 or 8 ohm speaker.

There is never a problem using a higher rated speaker - never use a lower one. A higher rated speaker will just create a bit less volume.

Mark.

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Posted by tstage on Monday, December 28, 2015 9:08 PM

Rich,

Since ESU says they recommend the 4 ohm speakers for their Select decoders (see earlier link from pg. 1), it may be worth contacting them, as well, to find out if an 8 ohm speaker is an acceptable substitute.

Tom

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