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Headlight troubles, or why can't model headlights be controlled as are real ones?

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Headlight troubles, or why can't model headlights be controlled as are real ones?
Posted by OldEngineman on Friday, September 7, 2018 3:57 PM

What follows is a rant.

Why can't dcc decoders control headlights as headlights are controlled on locomotives in the real world? I was a locomotive engineer for 32 years, in freight, commuter, and passenger, running for Conrail, Amtrak, and even spent some time on Metro-North. I worked on stuff old and new, from RS3's to SD50's, from GG-1's to Amtrak's HHP-8's. So... I'm familiar with engine headlight controls and how they're supposed to be used.

It's really quite simple:

Most engines have two headlight switches. The positions of each are: Off/dim/bright. (some have a "medium" position as well)

The headlights work independently of one another.

Once you turn one on, it stays as set until you change it.

Easy enough. Sometimes you might set one "wrong" -- but that's still your choice (or mistake!)...

 

But... models don't work this way, even with advanced dcc controls.

And ... they're not easily changed over to do so.

It can be done, but it sure isn't "easy".

 

I only have 3 model locos on a small layout (based it on the "Black River Junction" plan that MR put together a few years' back.

The first is a Walthers SD9 that came with dcc/sound pre-installed. That took a little tinkering, but I finally stumbled on a way to "divorce" the headlights from "directional control" and get them to work individually. Even got them to dim (not individually, but not important).

Second is an Atlas Trainman RS32 into which I put a basic Digitrax decoder. I was able to get the F and R headlights to illuminate independently, although I can't get a "dim" function to work. At least not yet.

The third is now an older Lifelike (Walthers) Proto 2000 SD9, into which I've installed a TCS T-1 decoder. The TCS decoder looks to have several interesting features, but I'm having a particularly difficult time trying to gain independent control over the headlights.

This decoder has so many possible "features" that I can't "break through" to gain simple control of the headlights (no ditch lights on these old diesels).

All I need is:

On/off control of the white wire (that's the F headlight, right?), and then be able to assign it to a function key (F1, or some other F#).

On/off control of the yellow wire (that's the R headlight, right?) and then assign it to a different function key (F2, or some other F#).

Theoretically, sounds easy.

In practice... not so much.

 

It's time for the vendors of dcc decoders (and perhaps for the NMRA as well) to acknowledge "prototypical" headlight operation -- that is to say, giving the modeler the exact same control over the two headlights as the engineer sitting in the seat has.

Granted, this doesn't take into accounts "consists".

But on the small layout I have, I don't see having a need to do that.

OK, rant over!

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Posted by rrinker on Friday, September 7, 2018 8:30 PM

 That's fairly easy to do with most any decoder - what seems to be the issue? Most decoders offer at least enough function mapping to put the two wires on a different function. And in many case also assign an independent dim function to each one. I would avoid using F1 and F2 for those things though, at least on a sound decoder, because those are by convention the bell and horn. ESU is by far the most flexible - ANY f-key can control ANY wire, with ANY effect and ANY condition. So if you want the white wire on if F3 is on, you cna do that. If you want the white wire to be on, but dim, when F3 is on and F4 is on, you can do that. F5 and F6 for the yellow wire - same deal. So you can turn the headlight on and off with F3, and dim it with F4. Independent of direction of travel or speed. 

 Check out the Proto Throttle - it even has the two prototypical knobs! Their instructions may also help in configuring decoders because you need to get rid of the automatic direction changing lights and make them indepedent for the knobs to work the way they are supposed to, and they tell you how to do this.

                                       --Randy


Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's

 

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

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Posted by OldEngineman on Saturday, September 8, 2018 12:28 PM

rrinker wrote: "That's fairly easy to do with most any decoder - what seems to be the issue?"

Heh.

Have you ever tried to actually set an engine up so that the F and R lights function this way?

I can get the "F end" light to come on and STAY on regardless of whether the loco is moving forward or backward.

But I cannot do the same with the "R end". That light is either off, or when activated by an Fkey, BOTH lights come on. It seems to be "connected" in some way to the F light and directional controls, and I can't "find the way" to break that connection.

A few very simple questions:

Is there a specific wire that always controls the F end headlight?

The white wire?

Is there a specific wire that always controls the R end headlight?

The yellow wire?

Or... are the "wire colors" something completely "apart from" the lights?

Re: "most any decoder"...

I'm coming to think that the TCS decoder I'm using (T1) is not built to do what I want to do. It seems to have been designed "to make things more helpful" to a general user by linking the headlights/dimming/ditch lights together. But it will not permit independent control of the F and R headlights.

BTW, I'm using a Roco z21 setup (I have both a phone-sized device AND a tablet to work with), and I'm also using the JMRI DecoderPro app.

Having said all that:

On another engine, I used a Digitrax DH126Ps decoder (low-end, actually). But... this one was EASY to get the F and R headlights working independently. The TCS... seems all but impossible.

I've read that all decoders were supposed to have the same basic values/whatever.

This DOES NOT seem to be the case in my admittedly limited experience..

I'm not interested in sound in any way. It seemed like a novelty on the first engine I bought, but I quickly grew tired of it. I had to listen to "real engine sounds" up close and personal for 32 years -- that was enough.

Not interest in the Proto throttle. Again, I worked with the real stuff for more than 30 years. many of those trips were on AEM-7's, and their control setup isn't anything at all like the Proto throttle's. These days, the touch pad seems just fine!

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Posted by BigDaddy on Saturday, September 8, 2018 2:49 PM

Old E, do you have something else we can call you?

Randy is one of DCC/electrical gurus.  I am a newbie but follow these threads in hopes something will sink in.  My decoders are loksound and I'm not sure how transferable there system is to TCS

I looked at the TCS Comprehensive Programming Guide.  As someone who has never done function remapping, it does not provide any hand holding for us.

It looks like CV 61 is a additive function, meaning you add up different values for differnent things you want the decoder to do or not do, like BEMF, headlight dimming when stopped, dimming when reversed. 

CV 123 also controls Rule 17 dimming.  Do you have to change both?  No idea.  If you throw enough information into a post, somebody might know.

Here is the remapping instructions.  It doesn't help me to know how to make the front and rear independant of loco direction

 What did you do to make the front light stay on at all times?

Henry

COB Potomac & Northern

Shenandoah Valley

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Posted by OldEngineman on Saturday, September 8, 2018 6:23 PM

"It looks like CV 61 is a additive function, meaning you add up different values for differnent things you want the decoder to do or not do, like BEMF, headlight dimming when stopped, dimming when reversed."

I tried shutting off (CV 61 = 0)

Regarding CV 123 and Rule 17 dimming:

I don't want this to have any effect. Again, for modeling purposes what is called "rule 17" in model forums (and I would guess amongst the dcc manufacturers, as well), isn't quite the way rule 17 actually worked out on the line or in the yard.

I'll have to see if I can disable CV 123, but I think I tried this already. I've tried a lot of things, often having to do a complete "reset" and start over.

I've spent time studying the function remapping (the page you posted above), and only -some- of it is written clearly for folks (like me) who aren't fluent in "dcc-fu".

I don't want to change anything with brake or motor circuits, the engine actually runs smoothly and quietly with the defaults. TCS did good insofar as that goes.

But again, there seems to be no way to set up the R headlight to work independently of the front.

(Aside: the loco I have the decoder installed in is an SD9, which in the real world were set up to run long hood forward, and the decoder seems predisposed to regard the short hood end as "the front". I can work around this IF I can "get control" of the R end headlight).

Perhaps a couple of images would help.

These are screenshots of the "lights" section from DecoderPro.

First, Digitrax. The menu is very basic and it's pretty easy to set up individual headlight operation using the popup menus:

(note: I could not post images, but you can see it here):

https://1drv.ms/u/s!An3uN8X2AHdOgmwpcxOZuNqPGCYH

I then assigned the front light to one function, and the rear light to another.

They work independently, and either one stays on regardless of loco direction.

 

Now, TCS:

https://1drv.ms/u/s!An3uN8X2AHdOgm2mkxBDYUXZss_3

It looks simple enough, and I can assign the F end light to a function key, but I cannot get the R end light to work independently when assigned to another function key.

Instead, the R end light either won't light at all, OR, when its function key is pressed BOTH lights come on.

Also (not shown) the TCS light panel has all kinds of other settings, for ditch lights, beacons, etc. That's great for those who need them, but what I need is a HEADLIGHT control that's simple and basic to set up and use. The SD9 has none of those other features.

 

OK, that's enough for now.

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Posted by BigDaddy on Saturday, September 8, 2018 6:38 PM

OldEngineman
I tried shutting off (CV 61 = 0)

My understanding it 0 shuts off BEMF. Not sure that you want to do that.

I use a lokprogrammer not Decoder Pro, but you've provided enough information that someone ought to be able to help you.

Henry

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Shenandoah Valley

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Posted by OldEngineman on Sunday, September 9, 2018 12:02 PM

A lot of views so far, but not many suggestions.

I figured there would be a few dcc experts here who could clear up this matter pretty quickly.

All I want to do it get full and independent control over the yellow wire (rear headlight).

I can get the white wire working ok, it seems.

But not the yellow one, because TCS seems to have coded their devices so that control of the yellow wire is "entwined" (for lack of a better word I can find) to all sorts of other lighting options. There's no easy or obvious way to "divorce it" from those options, and to make it "completely free" of everything else.

I'll keep trying for a few more days, but at this point it looks like my only option is to buy a different brand of decoder, and work from there.

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Posted by JoeinPA on Sunday, September 9, 2018 12:42 PM

Why not contact TCS? They have a good reputation for customer service. http://tcsdcc.com/contact 

Joe 

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Posted by jalajoie on Sunday, September 9, 2018 12:57 PM

This is what I do with a TCS silent decoder.

Train Control System
 
TCS T4X
 
Completely independent lights control
 
F0 = Front light ON/OFF
 F1 = Rear light ON/OFF
F3 = Ditch light ON/OFF
F4 = When on Dim litght ON/OFF in the direction of travel
Rear light dim automatically when traveling forward
 
 
CV Number
CV Value
CV Default
CV34
4
2
CV35
16
4
CV49
40
0
CV50
40
16
CV61
48
1
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
To have both lights ON at all time
 
CV49 = 32
CV50 = 32

Jack W.

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Posted by OldEngineman on Sunday, September 9, 2018 2:10 PM

JoeinPA -- I did contact TCS, and tried their suggestions ... no go.

jalajoie -- I tried your suggestions above. All I got was both lights would flash when I pressed F1 or F2 (can't remember which). Other than that ... nothing.

Anybody else?

RE: "F4 = When on Dim light ON/OFF in the direction of travel. Rear light dim automatically when traveling forward"

If this is how you have it set up, then it's not "completely independent light control" and that IS NOT how the lights work on a real locomotive.

Once set, the R end headlight should NEVER change regardless of the direction of movement and regardless of where the front headlight is set.

The two lights should have "no connection" between each other at all.

I'm coming to the conclusion that it's impossible to replicate this behavior on a TCS decoder. Or at least on the one that I have (T1).

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Posted by 7j43k on Sunday, September 9, 2018 2:32 PM

An approach that should work would be to replace the T1 with a decoder that has at least 4 lighting outputs (instead of the two of the T1).

Assign 4 of your favorite buttons to each of the lighting outputs:

1 will output full voltage--wire it to the front light

2 will output a dimmed voltage--wire it to the same bulb(s)

3 will output full voltage--wire it to the rear light

4 will output dimmed voltag--wire it to the rear light, also

 

For the front light

1 & 2 off = light off

1 on, 2 off = bright light

1 off, 2 on = dimmed light

1 & 2 on = bright light

 

For the rear light, buttons 3 & 4 used in the same way.

Operationally, I think I'd normally have both buttons on (for one or both lights).  I could then turn on and off button 1 (for example) to go back and forth from bright to dim.

 

It should work with bulbs.  LED's--maybe not.

 

As nice as it would be to have a 3 position rotary switch, I don't see it happening soon.

 

Ed

 

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Posted by rrinker on Sunday, September 9, 2018 3:27 PM

 It would appear that TCS won;t woork for this. The dim is a function, not really an effect that can be applied, so there is ooonly one of them, no way to make a dim button individually for each light, just a general 'dim' which can dim the active light. Individual on/off is possible, but then the dim button will dim whichever ones are on. Dim when stopped and directional dimming can be turned off. Not sure any with more functions, like a T4, would be any different. However, with more functions, you could take advantage of the way DCC function outputs are designed and combine 2 wires to each light - one with a bigger resistor than the other for dim. Turn on JUST the dim wire, dim light. Turn on the bright wire, with or without the dim wire being on, you get a bright light. Turn both off, no light.

                              --Randy


Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's

 

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

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Posted by 7j43k on Sunday, September 9, 2018 5:08 PM

rrinker

 It would appear that TCS won;t woork for this. The dim is a function, not really an effect that can be applied, so there is ooonly one of them, no way to make a dim button individually for each light, just a general 'dim' which can dim the active light.  

 

from the description of both the TCS A6X and T4X:

 

"Dimmable Brightness:  Configure multiple different brightness levels for your LED's or incandescent bulbs."

 

Besides 12V, the A6X also has an output for 1.5V bulbs; the T4X does not.

 

 

Ed

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Posted by jalajoie on Sunday, September 9, 2018 5:49 PM

OldEngineman

JoeinPA -- I did contact TCS, and tried their suggestions ... no go.

jalajoie -- I tried your suggestions above. All I got was both lights would flash when I pressed F1 or F2 (can't remember which). Other than that ... nothing.

Anybody else?

RE: "F4 = When on Dim light ON/OFF in the direction of travel. Rear light dim automatically when traveling forward"

If this is how you have it set up, then it's not "completely independent light control" and that IS NOT how the lights work on a real locomotive.

Once set, the R end headlight should NEVER change regardless of the direction of movement and regardless of where the front headlight is set.

The two lights should have "no connection" between each other at all.

I'm coming to the conclusion that it's impossible to replicate this behavior on a TCS decoder. Or at least on the one that I have (T1).

 

Sorry it did not worked for you. I just tested these CV setting with two locos and it does work as advertise for me. One loco is equipped with a TCS T1 and the other a TCS T4X.

On both decoder F0 control the front light, F1 control the rear light, F2 is not in the equation, F3 irrelevent with these locos and F4 has no effect on the T1 while with the T4X lights are bright in the direction of travel and dim otherwise. The behavior of F4 was good enough to me and I did not look further. I think Randy has a good explanation for that.

Your best bet to acheive your goal would be a Loksound Lokpilot V4 decoder or a NCE decoder.

Here are my setting for NCE

North Coast Engineering
D13 SRJ 
Completely independent lights control
F0 = Front light ON/OFF
F1 = Rear light ON/OFF 
CV Number
CV Value
CV Default
CV33
1
1
CV34
0 or 1
2
CV35
2
4
CV120
0
1
CV121
0
2
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

Dimming of front and rear light
F4 = Dim front light
F8 = Dim rear light 
CV Number
CV Value
CV Default
CV120
32
1
CV121
36
2

Jack W.

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Posted by OldEngineman on Sunday, September 9, 2018 10:44 PM

jalajoe wrote: "Sorry it did not worked for you. I just tested these CV setting with two locos and it does work as advertise for me. One loco is equipped with a TCS T1"

Hmmm.... I'm wondering if -some other- setting is "getting in the way". Perhaps something obscure?

I wrote back to TCS tech support, and will give them another day or two for more suggestions before I move to put something else into the loco.

The loco actually runs quite well with the TCS T1. It's the headlights that I can't "get control" over. Very frustrating, since it wasn't a problem with the other two decoders I have (one is a Tsunami that came factory-installed on the Walthers SD9, the other is a Digitrax that I installed into an Atlas RS32).

But using JMRI DecoderPro, I can see right away when I bring up the "lights" panel for all 3 decoders, that the T1 seems to have a problem with getting the two headlights "divorced from one another". I guess that's just the "operating paradigm" that the TCS designers decided to run with...

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Posted by jalajoie on Monday, September 10, 2018 6:20 AM
A reset of the decoder may help.

Jack W.

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Posted by rrinker on Monday, September 10, 2018 7:25 AM

 Yes, they list multiple brighnesses, but if you look at the function definitions there's just one 'Dim the lights" function, defaults to F4 but you can change the button. There isn't a "Dimmer one, F4, Dimmer two, F5" etc. that you assign to different function wires. Linked functions are about the only way with these decoders, but then you need 4 functions for just 2 lights.

 Frankly, the automated stuff ends up with the lights set just how you would do it with the individual knobs. Until I get a Protoo Throttle that actually has the proper control knobs, all sorts of extra button pushing doesn't add anything for me. Stopped or mobing, in either direction, the lights on my loco match what the rules say in the prototype close enough to my era rule book that I have, The best you can do with 2 functions is have each light turned on and off by its own button, and then a button to dim whichever one is on, and no automatic dimming when stopped, and no automatic direction changing.

 Except Loksound - and perhaps Lokpilot motor-only decoders can do similar mappings.

                                                     --Randy


Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's

 

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

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Posted by OldEngineman on Monday, September 10, 2018 4:43 PM

Monday afternoon followup:

TCS tech support sent me this:

=====

Program CV8 ->2 to perform a factory reset. Note that your locomotive's address will return to 3 if it was not already. 

Set CV49 to 40 (this is a omni-directional DIMMABLE light, not ditch light. My mistake.)

Set CV50 to 40 (same as above)

Set CV33 to 4

Set CV34 to 8

What this will do:

Button 1 on your throttle will turn on or off the forward headlight

Button 2 on your throttle will turn on or off the reverse headlight

Button 4 on your throttle will dim either of the lights which are ON. It is not possible to dim one light individually at a time. Sorry. 

All automatic dimming is disabled - manual control with button 4

I tested these settings with an identical decoder to yours and was successful.

=====

Well, guess what?

After doing a full reset and entering the values above, this STILL doesn't work on the Lifelike/Walthers/Proto SD9 that I have.

The R end light (which the decoder thinks is "the front") will light with button 1 and stay on when loco moves forward or backward.

But... when I press button 2... (which is the F end light, although the decoder thinks it's "the rear") BOTH lights illuminate (again, regardless of the direction of movement).

Button 4 does nothing.

I gave up and ordered a Soundtraxx MC2H104OP (non-sound decoder).

I'll post a followup when I receive it and install it into the engine.

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Posted by rrinker on Monday, September 10, 2018 5:03 PM

 Which type of factory board is in that SD9? If it's the kind with a big resistor in the middle (which has instructions to cut through some traces to install a decoder) - SCRAP IT. Long time ago I installed a decoder in one of those older P2K locos and I inspected to factory board and drew out the wiring diagram and even with the traces cut it is all kinds of screwy. The T1 decoder has a 9 pin plug on the decoder itself so hard wiring it in doesn;t mean you can't easily swap the decoder.

 I typically ALWAYS remove factory lighting boards when adding a decoder - most of the time they are configured for directional constant lighting on DC, don't need ANY of that circuitry for DCC.

 test it outside of the loco 0 just hook the red and black to the rails, and hook lights to the white and yellow wires, blue common to both. Bet the lights work as they say - one button turns on the front light, one button turns on the rear light, and F4 will dim whichever is turned on.

                                             --Randy

 


Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's

 

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Posted by wjstix on Tuesday, September 11, 2018 4:49 PM

Re dimming, you may need to adjust a CV to regulate how much power goes to the light when it's dimmed. I've had a few times where I thought dimming wasn't working, but it was just that the CV was set too high. That's especially a problem with LEDs since they use so little power.

Virtually every decoder defaults to F0 being on or off for both headlights. You'll need to set up a separate function button for one. Easiest way to do that - and pretty much anything else relating to setting up decoders - is to use Decoder Pro / JMRI.

Stix
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Posted by rrinker on Tuesday, September 11, 2018 5:04 PM

 That's another possibility, TCS uses CV64 for the dimming brightness, and the default is 15, which is suitable for incandescent bulbs but not LEDs. If using LEDs, try CV64 = 3 or 4.

                                   --Randy

 


Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's

 

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Posted by wjstix on Wednesday, September 12, 2018 9:39 AM

I'll have to check, but I'm pretty sure one brand of decoders (maybe MRC?) have a setting where the lights will toggle off-on-dim-off each time you hit the F button controlling lights...but not sure if it's for only both lights, or if it can be set to do each separately?

Stix
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Posted by rrinker on Wednesday, September 12, 2018 2:38 PM

NCE 4 function decoders have the desired control - there is a function map that dims with F4, and another that dims with the F8 button - so you set wire up to use the dim with F4 and hook that to the front light, and another outoput to dim with F8 and hook that to the rear light. So now you have 2 buttons for each light, one turns it on and off, the other toggles dim/bright.

                                           --Randy

 


Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's

 

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Posted by wjstix on Thursday, September 13, 2018 1:21 PM

wjstix

I'll have to check, but I'm pretty sure one brand of decoders (maybe MRC?) have a setting where the lights will toggle off-on-dim-off each time you hit the F button controlling lights...but not sure if it's for only both lights, or if it can be set to do each separately?

 
OK, yes it is MRC, setting CV 117 to 2 lets you toggle off-on-dim-off with F0, but it only does it for both lights at the same time (unless you wire the rear headlight up as an accessory light, then you can control it the same way with F3.)
Stix
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Posted by OldEngineman on Saturday, September 15, 2018 3:48 PM

It's time for a followup on my problems getting the headlights working independently on an older Proto 2000 SD9.

I received a Soundtraxx MC2H104OP decoder and that's now installed onto the loco chassis.

Using Decoder Pro I was able to tinker with the function and light panels and I now have the F light (white wire?) on/off set to Button 5 and the R light (yellow wire) set to button 6. I also set button 4 to be a dimmer.

The white wire illuminates in both directions with button 5. (ok)

Pressing button 4 dims the white wire. (ok)

BUT...

When I activate button 6 (yellow wire), BOTH lights still illuminate. (NOT ok)

Pressing button 4 dims both. (ok)

I'm feelin' like Charlie Brown ....   Arggghhhh!

 

I'm beginning to think that this problem could be due to something "hard wired on the circuit board", instead of within the decoder.

I've looked over the instructions/info that came with the unit. There's a section on dcc, and part of it reads:

"By installing a suitable decoder in the digital ready socket, even the locomotive's headlight can be independently controlled".

Well, ok.

'Cause that don't work, having tried TWO decoders already.

Neither produced the desired results.

BUT... hang on a minute.

On the circuit board, there's a small black wire (kind of like a loop), and the writing "cut for dcc". I'm wondering if this could be some kind of "connection" between the white and yellow wires intended for operation in dc mode.

So... I'm reaching out to those who have worked with these older Proto 2000 circuit boards (I believe this engine was one of the first-generation production models, as it came with NMRA couplers).

What is the small black wire for?

Why does it say to cut it?

What results will happen if I cut it?

I DON'T wan't to cut it and have the loco not run anymore, because other than the headlight, it runs just fine.

Thanks!

  • Member since
    February 2002
  • From: Reading, PA
  • 30,002 posts
Posted by rrinker on Saturday, September 15, 2018 8:05 PM

 I mentioned that many posts ago - those "cut here for DCC" P2K boards are best just removed completely. I'm in fact surprised if you haven't cut at the marked locations and the decoder hasn't fried - part of the wires you need to cut connect the track pickups (red and black) to the motor (orange and grey).

The configuration offered by TCS would have done the exact same thing you have with the Soundtraxx decoder. One button would turn the white wire ona dn off, another button would turn the yellow wire on and off, and F4 would dim whichever one you had on (or both if both were turned on). Both of them coming on with one button is the same problem - those ^#$( factory circuit boards. There are very few locos I ever leave the factory board in place (even more important with sound where the more space for a larger speaker, the better). 

 At least start with cutting the board where it says to cut. Make sure the trace is truly cut through - use a meter (remove the decoder first! Even the low voltage used for the ohm test in a multimeter can damage the decoder is applied to the output side). Touching the probes to the bare trace on either side of the X before you cut it should show 0 resistence, or beep the meter if it has a beep continuity mode. After cutting through at the X, it should be infinite resistence, or no beep.

 But I still say - ditch the whole thing. On the TCS T1 decoder, there is a 9 pin connector at the decoder, and wires. Red wire goes to teh right side rail pickup, black goes to the left side pickup, oragane to the motor + (whichever side was connected to the rail on the engineer's side when the loco was facing forward - the forward you want it to be, or as marked - P2K didn;t follow all protoypes and tended to make the locos all the same way regardless of how the railroad they were decoreated for actually ran them, I'm always flipping my GP7's around), grey goes to teh other motor terminal. White to the front headlight (if you keep the incandescent bulbs you need a resistor, or replace with LEDs and resistors), yellow to the rear light (white and yellow are the negative side if using LEDs), blue to both lights (positive for LEDs).

                                    --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 2004
  • 7,500 posts
Posted by 7j43k on Saturday, September 15, 2018 8:55 PM

And, if you replace the board and DON'T go with sound, you can add more weight in the bigger space.

I've got a couple of non-sound Genesis GP9's, and I'm going to replace the board with TCS A6X's.  And add some nice toxic lead.

 

Ed

  • Member since
    February 2018
  • From: Danbury Freight Yard
  • 459 posts
Posted by OldEngineman on Saturday, September 15, 2018 10:00 PM

I went ahead and cut the wire (only one that said it should be cut).

The white wire illuminates and dims. It's light isn't overly bright, either. I don't see why there are warnings that it will burn out, it's nowhere near that bright.

But now the yellow wire end stays dark, regardless of what I try.

I don't really consider myself as having the eyesight nor the manual dexterity nor the competence to tear out the existing board and start re-wiring myself. So I'll let that pass, rather than risk having an engine that won't run at all.

I think I'll end up using the loco with a working headlight on one end only. Guess I'll learn to live with that.

It just seems odd that the white wire works, but nothing I try sends power to the yellow wire (independently of the white wire).

Oh, well...

  • Member since
    July 2009
  • From: lavale, md
  • 4,678 posts
Posted by gregc on Sunday, September 16, 2018 5:20 AM

it seems to me that on the TCS T1, setting CV61 to 49 will automatically support rule 17.

  • the headlamp button turns on/off both lamps
  • both lamps are dimmed when stopped
  • the lamp in the direction of travel is bright

this built in feature is probably the thing getting it the way of manually controlling the dimness of both lamps

greg - Philadelphia & Reading / Reading

  • Member since
    February 2018
  • From: Danbury Freight Yard
  • 459 posts
Posted by OldEngineman on Sunday, September 16, 2018 9:48 AM

gregc wrote: "it seems to me that on the TCS T1, setting CV61 to 49 will automatically support rule 17."

But... I DON'T WANT "rule 17".

I want an F end headlight that is independently-controllable from the r-end headlight. (off/dim/bright)

I want an R end headlight that is independently-controllable from the f-end headlight. (off/dim/bright)

The "rule 17" feature on decoders (and on dc only locos) does not support this.

My experience is limited, but I have the headlights set up on two other dcc engines that I have up and running so far.

One is a Walthers Proto SD9 that came with ddc and sound pre-installed.

The other is an Atlas Trainman RS32 that I installed a basic Digitrax decoder into.

There must be something on the (older) Proto 2000 circuit board that prevents this, however.

I guess that "dcc ready" isn't really "ready" all the time...

Aside:

Many folks don't understand how rule 17 works "on the big engines". Nor do the people who make these decoders.

I don't want to get into a discussion about how to control the headlight on the engine one is running. I recall serious grudges (not by me, but held by others) because one guy forgot to dim the headlight for some other guy. I forgot myself now and then, things like that would "just happen" because you were busy with something else at the moment. In cases like that, "sorry" on the radio would be enough, and then you went on and forgot about it...

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