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Wiring an MRC Power Station 8 power booster into an NCE CS02 DCC system

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Wiring an MRC Power Station 8 power booster into an NCE CS02 DCC system
Posted by TheK4Kid on Saturday, December 18, 2021 8:39 PM

Does anyone have any idea of how I can wire an MRC Power Station 8 booster into a newer NCE CS02 system?

I've searched for several hours on the internet and came up with nothing?

The MRC Power Station 8 is an 8 amp booster  with an "N" scale and "HO" scale adjustment knob on it.

My alternative is to spend about $240 on an NCE SB5 smart booster

Thanks in advance

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Posted by Mark R. on Saturday, December 18, 2021 8:55 PM

My knee-jerk reaction is .... why do you think you need 8 amps ? On my layout with four operators each running two or three unit consists, I don't even approach 3 amps.

Mark.

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Posted by TheK4Kid on Saturday, December 18, 2021 9:17 PM

I've had this setting around on workshop shelf, and it is still new and unused, I purchased it for a song at a swap meet, and figured if I could use it, why spend almost $240 for an NCE SB5 unit which I need to power my rather large layout.

My older NCE unit burned up the other day while running 4 trains. the second one to do this in 6 months. Both times I had no shorts, they just gave up the ghost.

I have two of them , one as a backup, and my back up unit burned out also, only used it 6 months. I contacted NCE and they have retired the original units I have , so I bought a new CS02 but  need power for it.

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Posted by garya on Saturday, December 18, 2021 10:37 PM

TheK4Kid

Does anyone have any idea of how I can wire an MRC Power Station 8 booster into a newer NCE CS02 system?

I've searched for several hours on the internet and came up with nothing?

The MRC Power Station 8 is an 8 amp booster  with an "N" scale and "HO" scale adjustment knob on it.

My alternative is to spend about $240 on an NCE SB5 smart booster

Thanks in advance

 

I found this document:

https://www.modelrectifier.com/v/vspfiles/resources/dcc/power%20station%208%20AD501.pdf

Page 3 has diagrams.  Figure 1 is a wiring diagram.  Apparently you take the leads that would go to the track on your current DCC system and attach them to the DCC input screws on the Power Station 8.  

Figure 2 shows an alternate, where the command station powers part of the layout and the booster another part.  Note the track sections must be insulated from each other.

Gary

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Posted by TheK4Kid on Sunday, December 19, 2021 12:05 AM

Thanks Gary, but this applies only to the older NCE unit tht burned out on me

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Posted by maxman on Sunday, December 19, 2021 12:41 AM

According to the NCE website the CS02 requires a 1 amp power supply and implies you can purchase one of these inexpensively.

What type of power supply were you using for the “burned out” units, which I presume were CS01?

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Posted by gregc on Sunday, December 19, 2021 4:36 AM

i'm curious, maybe someone can help me understand

isn't the NCE CS02 a comand-station/booster?   this means besides power it has a cab bus connectoin for the controllers, a track connection and what NCE calls a control bus for additional boosters

it sounds like the CS02 is no longer working.  does this mean the command station part still works, the controllers still seem to work, but there is no track power because the booster is damaged?

looks like MRC doesn't have a separate control bus, secondary boosters are just tied to the track output of the primary unit.

so if the track outputs from the CS02 no longer work, the MRC can't be connected to them and it's not clear if the MRC unit will work with the CS02 control bus output

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Posted by richhotrain on Sunday, December 19, 2021 6:28 AM

gregc

isn't the NCE CS02 a comand-station/booster?  

No, the CS02 is a command station only, no booster or power supply.

My suggestion is that the OP contact NCE tomorrow morning or sign up on the NCE DCC site on groups.io and ask his question there. 

Rich

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Posted by TheK4Kid on Sunday, December 19, 2021 12:03 PM

Since there is very little technical information available on the MRC Power Station 8 , I ordered an NCE SB5 power booster unit. It comes with its own DC power supply and will hook up to the CS02 unit. It is differerent from the NCE power units I have for the CS01 units.

The NCE DB5 unit will not work with the NCE CS02 unit unless an SB5 unit is hooked up to the CS02 unit. The NCE SB5 power booster units are in very short supply.

NCE is out of stock , so as I searched the internet for them I found only one supplier on Ebay carried them and had only 2 left, so I ordered one.

As I searched many of those who carry them as a regullar item, all of them were out of stock and were quite high priced on them anyway.

My only other alternative was to completly change over to a Digitrax system, but I already have the NCE CS02 brand new, so I decided to see if I could find the SB5 unit it will work with.

Fortunately I found one and the price was quite reasonable.

I have been quite displeased with the CS01 units, I started off with one when I was building my layout. It lasted about one year, then sent out a puff of smoke about a year later.

There were no short circuits anywhere on the layout. I sent it in to NCE for repair.I got it back about 6 weeks later, and once again, a year later it burned out again. I purchased a second CS01 unit, and it lasted less than a year and failed. I sent it back to NCE for repair, and this time it lasted only 6 months before failing.

I have two local friends who also were using NCE CS01 units and they too both had their units fail in 8 to 15 months.

On the NCE website I read where NCE retired the CS01 units and developed the CS02 units using some of the same technology Digitrax was using.

I took it to mean that the CS01 units were not as reliable as the newer CS02 units, and the CS02 unit and the newer Power Cab units have upated technology over the older ones.

So I decided to set my older CS01 units on a workshop shelf and purchase the newer CS02 units. I purchased two at a reasonable price and will keep one as a backup unit.

At the time I purchased the CS02 units I didn't realize I would need a power booster unit and thought siunce I alkready had a brand new never used MRC Power Station 8 , perhaps I could use it.

But lacking the availability of any tech information on it, I decided to go ahead and purchase the NCE SB5 unit.

I will probably purchase a second one at a later date as a backup.

Being that it is the Christmas season and I have already spent quite a bit on other things, I will wait.I did however purchase two Menards HO buildings at a local Menards, one being the Cripple Creek Engine Repair shop and the Red Church for my layout and had Menards rebate certicates for almost $50, I decided to add the new buildings to my layout.

So thanks for the replies and Merry Christmas to all!!!

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Posted by tstage on Sunday, December 19, 2021 12:11 PM

TheK4Kid
But lacking the availability of any tech information on it, I decided to go ahead and purchase the NCE DB5 unit.

I presume you meant "SB5" unit, since you acknowledge earlier that the DB5s can only be daisy-chained to an SB5.

[Edit: Looks like you edited your post at the same time I was posting this.  Never mind.]

Tom

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Posted by TheK4Kid on Sunday, December 19, 2021 12:13 PM

Yes, I meant SB5, I have went back and edited my post.

I can run 4 DCC locomotives with sound and a set of PRR heavy weight passenger cars with lights when I was using an NCE CS01 unit. I don't know if that was overloading it , but I can't see where it would have. I also have a "surge" protection power unit hooked up between the wall power outlet and the NCE power supply to the NCE CS01 unit, so I would think a surge would  not get through. It's a very high quality surge protection unit.

I decided on the surge protection unit before I ever built my layout.

With my background in electronics egineering and also my background in military radar and missilke guidance systems development, I am wondering if any or perhaps many of the elctronic components used in the CS01 units were imported from China or elewhere and were not of the highest quality that they could have been. The tolerances we used in military systems were almost always of + or - 1 percent tolerances.

I also own some quite expensive Pioneer and other high end stereo equipment and have had components fail, usually capacitors or resistors in the audio circuitry and I have replaced them with higher quality capacitors and resistors they no longer fail.

 

Ed aka "TheK4Kid"

 

 

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Posted by mikeGTW on Sunday, December 19, 2021 12:35 PM

K4 or anyone   I looked at documentaion for the CS02 and it only shows output for a program track nothing for the mains The diagram in the pdf from NCE shows a PB100 connected to the CS02 and the track power coming from the PB110

Just curious

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Posted by TheK4Kid on Sunday, December 19, 2021 12:44 PM

mikeGTW

K4 or anyone   I looked at documentaion for the CS02 and it only shows output for a program track nothing for the mains The diagram in the pdf from NCE shows a PB100 connected to the CS02 and the track power coming from the PB110

Just curious

 

That's correct.

The SB5 unit is needed, and after you add an SB5 , you can add DB5 units to the SB5.

The only output of the CS02 is is the track programming.

There is not a "track" output on the CS02 unit. I myself did not relaize this until I received the CS02 units I purchased. This is why I was wondering about the use of an MRC Power Station 8 unit with the CS02 .

However lacking a schematic diagram of the MRC unit, I can not figure out how to wire it with the CS02.

I may have had to design and build some circuitry to mate the CS02 unit and the MRC unit and that would not only take some time, but I'd have to order parts, etc.

And there would have had been some cost to it also.

I saw the SB5 unit add on as the quickest and easiest way to solve my problem.As far as the MRC unit producing 8 amps of track power, I could hace designed a circuit to cut it down to 5 amps.

But yet again, it would require time and parts and some cost.

So I decided to spend the extra money on the SB5 unit, which is required to make the the CS02 unit work to run DCC trains.

The NCE PB110 unit is a 10 amp power unit designed to be used "only" with O gauge and bigger G gauge trains, not, I repeat not HO scale!

 

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Posted by jjdamnit on Sunday, December 19, 2021 5:52 PM

Hello All,

When I was trying to "Franken-bash" (upgrade) my dead-end DCC system with NCE components, I contacted them:

Support@ncecorporation.com

Even though what I was attempting was not possible, the great folks at NCE provided me with the information and schematics I requested.

After reviewing the materials they sent I decided it would be easier to upgrade the entire DCC system to NCE and avoid the hassle of piecemealing.

Reach out to them before doing any more damage through trial and error.

Hope this helps.

"Uhh...I didn’t know it was 'impossible' I just made it work...sorry"

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Posted by CSX Robert on Sunday, December 19, 2021 8:35 PM

TheK4Kid
The SB5 unit is needed, and after you add an SB5 , you can add DB5 units to the SB5. The only output of the CS02 is is the track programming.

No, you do NOT need the SB5 with the CS02.  The DB5 manual is not clear on this because it was written for the Power Cab (The SB5 and DB5, "Smart" Booster and "Dumb" booster, were designed primarily for the Power Cab, though they will work with the other systems).  The "smart" part of the SB5 is a built in command station with a control bus output.  The Power Cab does not have a separate control bus output so you need the SB5 to be able to add additioinal dumb boosters.  The CS02 does have a control bus output for connecting to boosters so you do not need the "smart" part of the SB5.  In fact, to use the SB5 with the CS02, you will have to disable the "smart" part.

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Posted by CSX Robert on Sunday, December 19, 2021 10:00 PM

TheK4Kid
Since there is very little technical information available on the MRC Power Station 8

The MRC Power Statin 8 is expecting a DCC track output as it's input.  The contorl bus output fro the CS02 is just a low power version of the track output, so it most likely would work as the input to the Power Station 8.

TheK4Kid
My only other alternative was to completly change over to a Digitrax system, but I already have the NCE CS02 brand new

Actually, you could just get a Digitrax booster.  Nce has instructions for wiring the CS02 to a Digitrax booster here:https://ncedcc.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/200590769-Digitrax-and-Lenz-Connections

Several years ago NCE completely redid their website and ever since some information has been hard to find on it.

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Posted by fiskerbiscuit on Tuesday, December 21, 2021 3:34 PM

K4Kid and all,

To clarify:

  • The CS02 is a DCC command station only. It does require a separate power supply. Most users take power from their NCE Brutus or NCE P515
  • The NCE SB5 is a DCC command station and 5 amp track booster. NCE designed it as an upgrade path for the Power Cab [1.6amps nominal]
  • The SB5 can be configured as a slave only booster to be used with a CS02 command station 
  • Any NCE booster including the PB5, DB5, PB105 and PB110 can be used with a CS02
  • The PB5 and DB5 5amp boosters are identical in terms of hardware and differ only in the external case. Both have integrated P514 power supplies 
  • The PB105 booster is identical to the PB5/DB5 and uses the same external housing as a PB5. The PB105 does NOT come with a power supply. 
  • The PB105 requires a 15vac, 5amp power supply such as the NCE P515
  • The PB110 booster requires at minimum a 18vac, 10 amp power supply such as the NCE Brutus or Digitrax PS2012e. The PB110 will not function correctly with a P515 power supply

I hope this clears up any confusion.

Erik Fiske, Tony's Train Exchange

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Posted by richhotrain on Wednesday, December 22, 2021 7:25 AM

We NCE users can frame the prior reply from Tony's Train Exchange and hang it on our layout wall. Thank you, Erik Fiske!

Rich

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Posted by TheK4Kid on Wednesday, December 22, 2021 4:44 PM

fiskerbiscuit

K4Kid and all,

To clarify:

  • The CS02 is a DCC command station only. It does require a separate power supply. Most users take power from their NCE Brutus or NCE P515
  • The NCE SB5 is a DCC command station and 5 amp track booster. NCE designed it as an upgrade path for the Power Cab [1.6amps nominal]
  • The SB5 can be configured as a slave only booster to be used with a CS02 command station 
  • Any NCE booster including the PB5, DB5, PB105 and PB110 can be used with a CS02
  • The PB5 and DB5 5amp boosters are identical in terms of hardware and differ only in the external case. Both have integrated P514 power supplies 
  • The PB105 booster is identical to the PB5/DB5 and uses the same external housing as a PB5. The PB105 does NOT come with a power supply. 
  • The PB105 requires a 15vac, 5amp power supply such as the NCE P515
  • The PB110 booster requires at minimum a 18vac, 10 amp power supply such as the NCE Brutus or Digitrax PS2012e. The PB110 will not function correctly with a P515 power supply

I hope this clears up any confusion.

Erik Fiske, Tony's Train Exchange

 

Erik Fiske

If I have an NCE SB5 power booster, then would I even need a CS02 command station?

My understanding is the CS02 was the updated replacement for the now retired CS01.

But what I am reading about the SB5 unit is it is both a command station and booster in the same unit.

So I won't even need a new CS02 unit?

MY layout is built on three tables, each 6 feet wide by 8 feet long with two side by side main lines and and one long figure eight with two side by side main lines and several sidings around the entire layout.

I am still working on my layout. I can run 4 DCC powered trains at once on the layout. So will the SB5 command station-booster be sufficient?

What I want to clarify, is a CS02 command station would be totally unneccessary to hook up with the SB5 unit?

I did order one, but I have not even unboxed it, so I could return it then.

The SB5 unit I ordered arrived today 12/22/2021.

So this is all I need is this correct?

THanks

 

Ed

 

My MRC 8 amp unit I have set back on a workshop shelf, and it has never been used.

I may sell it later on

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Posted by tstage on Wednesday, December 22, 2021 5:27 PM

Ed,

The NCE Smart Booster (SB5) is a 5A command station/booster.  When you plug a Power Cab into it, it overrides the command station/booster of the 1.7A Power Cab; essentially turning it into a ProCab throttle.

You can plug any NCE throttle - i.e. Power Cab, ProCab, CAB-06 - into an SB5 and control your layout.  What you don't get with an SB5 is a dedicated programming bus.  But you don't need one, if you a Power Cab.  You would need the Power Cab's PCP panel separately for programming.  This you could use at your benchtop w/o needing to have it connected to your layout.

As mentioned, the SB5 gives you 5A of total power.  If, for example, each sound decoder uses 0.5A, that will allow you to operate 8-9 locomotives w/sound with a little buffer leftover.  That should be quite sufficient for your needs, I'd presume.

BTW, what are you using as a throttle?  You keep talking about the CS01/CS02 command stations but I missed any mention of how you are controlling your locomotives.

Tom

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Posted by richhotrain on Wednesday, December 22, 2021 5:49 PM

The CS02 has a dedicated programming track. As I understand it, a DB5 booster can be used with a CS02. The DB5 is normally purchased with a power supply. The OP would not need the SB5 which would be configured as a slave booster with the CS02. So, the SB5 seems like overkill since the OP already owns the CS02 command station.

Rich

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Posted by CSX Robert on Wednesday, December 22, 2021 6:26 PM

TheK4Kid
But what I am reading about the SB5 unit is it is both a command station and booster in the same unit. So I won't even need a new CS02 unit?

As mentioned, the SB5 does not have a program track output.  I believe all current decoders support ops mode programming, so could be programmed without the program track output, but I don't know that for sure (it is not a requirement to be NMRA compliant).  Additionally, if you program a wrong address and don't know the new address of the decoder you may not be able to program it since you need to know the address of the decoder to program it in ops mode (you can actually do ops mode programming to the broadcast address, but I don't know if NCE supports that).

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Posted by TheK4Kid on Wednesday, December 22, 2021 6:31 PM

tstage

Ed,

The NCE Smart Booster (SB5) is a 5A command station/booster.  When you plug a Power Cab into it, it overrides the command station/booster of the 1.7A Power Cab; essentially turning it into a ProCab throttle.

You can plug any NCE throttle - i.e. Power Cab, ProCab, CAB-06 - into an SB5 and control your layout.  What you don't get with an SB5 is a dedicated programming bus.  But you don't need one, if you a Power Cab.  You would need the Power Cab's PCP panel separately for programming.  This you could use at your benchtop w/o needing to have it connected to your layout.

As mentioned, the SB5 gives you 5A of total power.  If, for example, each sound decoder uses 0.5A, that will allow you to operate 8-9 locomotives w/sound with a little buffer leftover.  That should be quite sufficient for your needs, I'd presume.

BTW, what are you using as a throttle?  You keep talking about the CS01/CS02 command stations but I missed any mention of how you are controlling your locomotives.

Tom

Tom,

Thanks for the reply.

I have two Power Cab controllers and 3 Pro Cab controllerswith Two UTP plg ins on both sides of my layout and two spare UTP units still NIB .

I will plan on sending the  CS02 unit back to the seller I got it bfrom.

Thankss for clearing things up for me.

When I went on NCE's website, from the information I saw there they indiscated the CS01 had been retired and I thought the CS02 unit was its replacement.

At the time I didn't understand the CS02 unit did not have a 5 amp booster built in like the CS01 had.

THanks again!

 

Ed

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Posted by tstage on Wednesday, December 22, 2021 6:40 PM

Rich,

Am I correct in understanding that the CS02 has only 1A of output?  That's less than the Power Cab.

Since the CS02 is only the command station, Ed's booster options would therfore be the follow (using TTE's website and Erik's info as reference):

  • DB5 - $187.16 (power supply included)
  • PB5 - $202.76 (power supply included)
  • SB5 - $218.76 (power supply included)
  • PB105 - $163.76 + $62.36 for NCE #P515 power supply (NOT included)
  • PB110 - $329.95 + cost of power supply (NOT included)

So, the DB5 would be the least expensive option with the PB5 $15 more.  Both include the power supply.  The SB5 is $30 more than the DB5 and, too, includes the power supply.  Ed already purchased the SB5 and received it today.  The cost of returning it and swapping it for either the DB5 or PB5 would essentially cost him $15-30 in S&H(?)

The PB105 (and separate P515 power supply) is only a little more than the SB5 and its power supply.  If Ed hadn't already purchased the SB5, I would suggest the PB105, since that is what is essentially sold together with the CS02 to create the PH Pro 5A system.  And he'd have the dedicated programming track bus with the CS02, as you pointed out.

But...since Ed has already purchased and has the SB5 in-hand, perhaps that's the most cost-effect option for him at this point.  He can use as is with his Power Cab thottles...or as a DB5 with his CS02.

Tom

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Posted by richhotrain on Wednesday, December 22, 2021 8:02 PM

tstage

Rich,

Am I correct in understanding that the CS02 has only 1A of output? 

Yes, just enough to power the programming track.

tstage

But...since Ed has already purchased and has the SB5 in-hand, perhaps that's the most cost-effect option for him at this point.

I agree. Had he not yet purchased the SB5, the DB5 would have been the less expensive option.

Rich

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Posted by TheK4Kid on Wednesday, December 22, 2021 8:19 PM

tstage

Rich,

Am I correct in understanding that the CS02 has only 1A of output?  That's less than the Power Cab.

Since the CS02 is only the command station, Ed's booster options would therfore be the follow (using TTE's website and Erik's info as reference):

  • DB5 - $187.16 (power supply included)
  • PB5 - $202.76 (power supply included)
  • SB5 - $218.76 (power supply included)
  • PB105 - $163.76 + $62.36 for NCE #P515 power supply (NOT included)
  • PB110 - $329.95 + cost of power supply (NOT included)

So, the DB5 would be the least expensive option with the PB5 $15 more.  Both include the power supply.  The SB5 is $30 more than the DB5 and, too, includes the power supply.  Ed already purchased the SB5 and received it today.  The cost of returning it and swapping it for either the DB5 or PB5 would essentially cost him $15-30 in S&H(?)

The PB105 (and separate P515 power supply) is only a little more than the SB5 and its power supply.  If Ed hadn't already purchased the SB5, I would suggest the PB105, since that is what is essentially sold together with the CS02 to create the PH Pro 5A system.  And he'd have the dedicated programming track bus with the CS02, as you pointed out.

But...since Ed has already purchased and has the SB5 in-hand, perhaps that's the most cost-effect option for him at this point.  He can use as is with his Power Cab thottles...or as a DB5 with his CS02.

Tom

 

On the sellers site it states "DO NOT" buy this DB5 unless you have an SB5

It will not work unless you have an SB5

I sent NCE customer support an email, but most likely won't hear back until tomorrow 12/23

I think NCE should be mor specific about their equipment

Regards,

Ed

 

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Posted by TheK4Kid on Wednesday, December 22, 2021 8:46 PM

I just did some reading on the NCE website.

The CS02 was designed to be used with the PH-110 sytem which puts out 10 amps of power, far too much power for an HO scale system.

It also states that the SB5 will work with a NCE POwer Cab or an NCE Pro Cab

The SB5 was designed to operate up to 10 DCC locomotives simultaneously.

So it sounds like all I have to do is power up the SB5 , and and hook up a a line from the cab bus on the SB5 to the UTP cab plug ins and I'll be all set to go.

If you doubt me go read the manuals at the NCE website.

Thanks for all the replkies I have received on this subject!

Ed

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Posted by tstage on Wednesday, December 22, 2021 10:21 PM

TheK4Kid
I just did some reading on the NCE website...

It also states that the SB5 will work with a NCE POwer Cab or an NCE Pro Cab

The SB5 was designed to operate up to 10 DCC locomotives simultaneously.

So it sounds like all I have to do is power up the SB5 , and and hook up a a line from the cab bus on the SB5 to the UTP cab plug ins and I'll be all set to go.

If you doubt me go read the manuals at the NCE website.

Ed,

I own an SB3a/SB5 and a Power Cab so I already know they work together.  The SB3 was actually the predecessor to the SB5 and came out in 2008.  The SB3 was updated to the SB5 in 2013.

As mentioned, you can use the SB5 with any NCE throttle because it's a command station/booster.  So, a Power Cab, ProCab, or CAB-06 throttle can all be used to operate your layout.  The disadvantage of the CAB-06 is that it has less functionality than the Power Cab or ProCab throttle...but it can and does work.

The amount of locomotives any DCC system can operate simultaneously is contingent on the sum total current draw of the locomotives you have operating on your layout at a given time.  0.25A per motor-only decoder and 0.5A per sound decoder is a general accepted norm.  However, some newer decoders with newer locomotives may draw less current than that - e.g. 0.25A and <.  You could also have an older locomotive with a less efficient motor that draws upward of 1A.  I installed a coreless motor in a 2-6-6-2 brass Mallet that is outfitted with a Loksound decoder and two speakers and it draws <0.1A.  So, you might be able to operate more than 10 locomotives with the SB5 as your booster.

You can operate your throttles directly from the SB5 or via any UTP panels you have daisy-chained around your layout from your SB5.  The advantage of the UTP panel is that you conveniently unplug & plug your throttles so that they become true walkarounds.  With the Power Cab - if you unplugged it from the PCP panel - your layout would shut down.  Connected to the SB5, however, you can unplug & plug your Power Cab and your trains continue to run.

TheK4Kid
On the sellers site it states "DO NOT" buy this DB5 unless you have an SB5 It will not work unless you have an SB5

Re-read Eric's Points #3 & #4 again.  Yes, a DB5 needs to be grounded to a SB5 in order to work properly.  What Eric stated was that both a DB5 and a SB5 ("dumbed down" to a DB5) can be used as a booster for a CS02 - just like a dumbed down SB5 can be used with another SB5 as a DB5.  I'm not sure what seller you are referring to but the folks at TTE have been selling NCE products for a lonnnng time so I would give them the benefit of the doubt of what will and will not work together.

TheK4Kid
I think NCE should be mor specific about their equipment

Sometimes it pays to browse through the manufacturer's manual for a given piece of equipment first before you purchase something.  This can often help give you a better understanding what it will and will not do and whether it's going to meet your current and future needs.  At least the CS02 is still a viable alternative for you should you opt to power it with the SB5 serving as a DB5.

Tom

https://tstage9.wixsite.com/nyc-modeling

Time...It marches on...without ever turning around to see if anyone is even keeping in step.

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Posted by richhotrain on Thursday, December 23, 2021 6:47 AM

tstage
  
TheK4Kid
On the sellers site it states "DO NOT" buy this DB5 unless you have an SB5 It will not work unless you have an SB5 

Re-read Eric's Points #3 & #4 again.  Yes, a DB5 needs to be grounded to a SB5 in order to work properly.  What Eric stated was that both a DB5 and a SB5 ("dumbed down" to a DB5) can be used as a booster for a CS02 - just like a dumbed down SB5 can be used with another SB5 as a DB5.  I'm not sure what seller you are referring to but the folks at TTE have been selling NCE products for a lonnnng time so I would give them the benefit of the doubt of what will and will not work together. 

I am confused on this point. Since the CS02 is a command station, I thought that the DB5 booster would work without the need for an SB5. That seems to be clearly stated on Erik's point #4.

Rich

Alton Junction

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    February 2007
  • From: Christiana, TN
  • 2,134 posts
Posted by CSX Robert on Thursday, December 23, 2021 9:03 AM

tstage
Sometimes it pays to browse through the manufacturer's manual for a given piece of equipment first before you purchase something.  This can often help give you a better understanding what it will and will not do and whether it's going to meet your current and future needs.  At least the CS02 is still a viable alternative for you should you opt to power it with the SB5 serving as a DB5.

The problem is NCE is very lacking in information for some of their products and in those cases the manuals are not of much help.  The manual for the DB5 makes no mention of using the DB5 in any way other than with an SB5, so without a more thorough understanding of how all the pieces work together the DB5 manual makes it sound like it can only be used with an SB5.  The DB3 and DB3a manuals both show using those devices without an SB, so I don't know why they dropped that information in the DB5 manual.

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