richg1998 The club I use to belong to smoked a NCE five amp booster when trying to run DC and DCC in different blocks. DC was stopped.
The club I use to belong to smoked a NCE five amp booster when trying to run DC and DCC in different blocks. DC was stopped.
The one time (so far) that I delivered DCC to a DC locomotive, it just sat there and hummed until my slow wits figured there was a problem. Loco was fine. DCC source was fine. I wonder why there was smoke in this case.
We thought that we could do it. With block control, a dispatcher has to be aware of who is in what block and drivers have to request a block. Old timers love to gab and not pay attention. Rich
We thought that we could do it. With block control, a dispatcher has to be aware of who is in what block and drivers have to request a block. Old timers love to gab and not pay attention.
Rich
Edit.
Couple months before I left, we ran #16 buss and no more block control. Macular degeneration in one eye was becoming an issue and hands not steady enough at times for handling trains but it was great when for many years.
If you ever fall over in public, pick yourself up and say “sorry it’s been a while since I inhabited a body.” And just walk away.
Sorry, I skipped over twenty years of club history there with a few words. Of course this shift did not happen in a few weeks, or even a few years. It was very slow.
.
I am never going to say anything bad about anyone else, or a club, in a forum, so I will leave it at that. Like I said, they have accomplished a lot, and the club layout is beautiful.
-Kevin
Living the dream.
SeeYou190 When I was in High School, I was an original "Charter Member" of the local model railroad club. For fifteen years we welcomed everybody and really had a great time. . Then... some members got "serious", to the point now, 35 years later, they have a beautiful layout that was actually featured in Great Model Railroads recently. . The price... well... Now you MUST be a member of the NMRA working towards your MMR just to join the club. They are doing everything that can be done to keep people out of the club. Membership is a mere fraction of what it once was, and they are very elitist. All the old members left as this change took place. . Is this dysfunctional, or was it the right thing to do? That is all a matter of opinnion. . -Kevin .
When I was in High School, I was an original "Charter Member" of the local model railroad club. For fifteen years we welcomed everybody and really had a great time.
Then... some members got "serious", to the point now, 35 years later, they have a beautiful layout that was actually featured in Great Model Railroads recently.
The price... well... Now you MUST be a member of the NMRA working towards your MMR just to join the club. They are doing everything that can be done to keep people out of the club. Membership is a mere fraction of what it once was, and they are very elitist. All the old members left as this change took place.
Is this dysfunctional, or was it the right thing to do? That is all a matter of opinnion.
"All the old members left..."
If they were a minority, they one way or another got outvoted.
If they were a majority, I question why they let things change in a direction the majority disliked.
Since the club still exists, and appears pretty successful, it doesn't look dysfunctional to me.
It appears one of the things (many) clubs have to deal with is the "lowest common denominator". Does the club lower "standards" enough so that the least competent member is comfortable? Does the club work towards very high standards, and let the "chips" fall where they may? Neither seems to have a monopoly on "the right thing to do".
Ed
Medina1128Glad that I'm a lone wolf that has a large enough layout at home that's fun to operate. It's at the edge of manageable by myself, what with maintenance and upkeep.
I could not have said that any better. That is exactly the way I feel.
Glad that I'm a lone wolf that has a large enough layout at home that's fun to operate. It's at the edge of manageable by myself, what with maintenance and upkeep. I run a cleaning car once a month over the entire layout, and I'm good to go. Sure, I'd love to convert to DCC just for the flexibility it offers, but the costs would be a little much.
Marlon
See pictures of the Clinton-Golden Valley RR
IRONROOSTER <snip> Now you know why so many of us don't belong to clubs. Oh I know there are many advantages, but the "club of one" has no arguments. <snip> Paul
<snip>
Now you know why so many of us don't belong to clubs. Oh I know there are many advantages, but the "club of one" has no arguments.
Paul
I dunno, I argue with myself all the time....
--Randy
Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's
Visit my web site at www.readingeastpenn.com for construction updates, DCC Info, and more.
rockymidlandrr,When does a club because dysfunctional? It's when the majority of members believe that their personal egos are more important than the club.
I've been a member of a large club for 25 years. You'll always have conflicts, big or small, but conflicts do not equal dysfunction. It's when these conflicts cannot be resolved that it becomes dysfunctional. The members have to learn how to lose gracefully; they aren't going to be able to get their way all the time. At some point, one has to realize this and live with less than ideal results for the benefit of all. Sure, one can fight (and fight) until one wins...but what good is winning if the rest of the club members walk out the door, never to return?
One should always think about the good of the club first. This is a cooperative effort; one needs to learn how to cooperate in order to flourish as a club.
Something I would suggest for any club is to do non-club things together for the purpose of building friendships. For example, at my club we have an annual pool party every summer and an annual X-Mas party every December, both held at member's houses. We have club trips on Amtrak or to railroad museums. We have had banquets at the club with families, we travel together to big train shows like Springfield, and so on. All clubs should have activities in order to build a fellowship between the members, which is actually Rule #1 at our club. Rule #2 is to build a model railroad, but that's only after we obey Rule #1.
As for DC vs. DCC, the club should really have a vote to resolve the issue. It's what my club did; the final tally was 41 to 10 for DCC-only. Of the 10 members that didn't vote for DCC, only one quit because of it (mainly because he's cheap). The rest either coped, became DCC users themselves, or don't run trains (not a big deal...these guys didn't run trains in the first place). One result of the debate was that we hold a monthy DCC installation clinic at the club since 1999 (when we voted). One member maintains a collection of DCC decoders & LED's, and these can be purchased off of him at the clinics.
BTW, our club has a roster of some 50 locos (of all kinds) that belong to the club. All have DCC decoders. Anyone who can't afford DCC (or locos at all) can certainly use our club-owned equipment; that is what it is there for. We also have a number of club-owned DCC throttles which serve the same purpose as well as being a back up for any member who has a throttle die during a show or operation session.
Graham Line,Brass should have nothing to do with it. I've installed DCC decoders in dozens of brass locos, and it's actually easier than doing an Athearn BB.
tstage,At our club, we have committees and the committee chairman is responsible for everything that committee does. The Electrical Committee Chairman is the one that decides on the wiring standards. If it isn't up to snuff, it is done over until it is correct. Same goes for the Benchwork Committee, the Scenery Committee, Trackwork Committee, etc. Overseeing all committees is the Chief Engineer, who is annually elected by the membership and serves on the Board of Directors. If the Chief Engineer doesn't like what the committee does, he can overrule them as he is in charge of all layout standards.
The point of all this is that we have one person making all the decisions for that particular focus. Your example of every member making their own module would not happen at our club because the Benchwork Chairman would either do the work himself to proper standards or make sure it was being done properly. If that particular chairman oversteps his bounds or is incompetent, the Chief Engineer can reign him in. All are, of course, answerable to the membership at large.
But someone has to be in charge or chaos will result. I'm reminded of an old MR Op-Ed called "I was a model railroad club tyrant". The writer had been part of a start-up club that had big dreams. They came up with a bunch of standards to make sure everthing would work right, and the writer was elected to enforce these rules. But as soon as construction started, the members started taking short cuts. The writer kept forcing the members to follow the standards, and resentment built up, going both ways. The members from having to redo work, and the writer for being called a "tyrant". Finally, when the president of the club, who came up with most of the stanards himself, took short cuts and refused to fix them, the "tyrant" had enough and quit the club. Oddly enough, that layout was nothing but trouble and, IIRC, the club folded because of it.
I have heard it said that there are people who have a pile of DC only locomotives complaining that they'd:
Have to convert all there locos to DCC--much too expensive and difficult
Not be able to run trains when the layout was set to DCC (see my earlier comment)
I've STILL got a pile of DC only locomotives, some of which will likely never be converted. But. I also have some old Atlas locos that came with a decoder whether you wanted it or not. All you really need to play with DCC is "one" good locomotive. Maybe a nice switcher. Or a GP9, like the one I just converted to DCC/sound. It works great all by itself.
It surely looks like someone's bein' a big selfish baby when they complain that they can't ALWAYS run their trains because the layout's DCC today. Looks really piggy to me. Myself, I've made it a point to pick up a kupla locomotives for roads I don't model (SP, ATSF....) just against the day when someone suggests we do an all-one-road operating session. Again, buy ONE DCC loco and give it a try. Or maybe, just maybe, ask one of the guys who has one if you can try his out.
I would suggest to model railroad club members that they show up at the next meeting looking for someone who could use help on THEIR project. Either that, or fixing the defective DC wiring.
We have a board of directors that have the final say on structural decisions, and sub working groups that make recommendations to the board. The board tries to get unanimous decisions, but splits have occured. I've had to tell folks that we should get the president's approval on every decision - or we may have to find a replacement...
I belonged to a start-up MRRing club 10+ years ago. We had grandiose plans but implementing a standard and sticking to it (without taking short cuts) was a continual problem.
One of the challenges was our meeting place: The garage of the founder's business. While it was a nice spacious area, we had to create individual 4 x 8 modules that could be set up and broken down and stored for each meeting.
I tried creating a fixture for cutting all the pieces needed to assemble the layout frames but it wasn't always followed as closely as it should have. The result: Mismatched and out-of-square sections that didn't mate well with one another. Other issues stemmed from inconsistent methods of wiring and laying track. Sadly, fewer and fewer members began showing up and the club eventually dissolved after 2 or 3 years.
EVERY family and EVERY organization is "dysfunctional" to a lesser or greater degree. Why? Because human beings are involved and they all have their individual likes, passions, preferences, and quirks. If members are continually butting heads over changes in your current situation then it's probably inevitable that a split or a closing might not be too far in the future.
In any well-run organization not everyone has to agree on everything - i.e. crossing their i's and dotting their t's exactly the same way. However, there should be a like-mindedness towards goals. What those "goals" are is what needs to be determined and agreed-upon by everyone in that organization.
In re: to Simon's statement above, I guess I'm the camp of reliable operations first then scenery. While I love scenery and am a very detailed person: If a layout/locomotive doesn't run reliably or realistically then all the scenery/sound/cool lighting-effects means dittley-squat. I want to see a train run. Imagine if the prototype only ran operations when everything looked "pretty"?
Are duties divided up at your club according to interest and abilities? Does everyone have a vote on changes? What is the determining margin of yeas for changes to be implemented? 51%? 66%? 75%? Unanimous?
Tom
https://tstage9.wixsite.com/nyc-modeling
Time...It marches on...without ever turning around to see if anyone is even keeping in step.
Our club has about 8 fairly active members. Thank God we don't have any debates about DCC (yes, i've installed decoders for free too). We are planning to do a few free workshops on how to install decoders. Apart from doing the chores, the biggest fights are about changes to the layout. I've observed that there are two camps: those that like to build nice scenery, and those that build for fun and reliable operations. A few painful votes were made. Some members don't talk to each other... Seems that some conflicts are unavoidable, even with the best governance structures.
Simon
One of the best clubs I ever belong to everything had to be approved by the majority of the vote before any action could be taken.
The biggest problem with DCC is many modelers doesn't understand how it works and how easy it is to use,instead what they see is the cost of a decoder for all of their locomotives instead of a select few that will be used solely at their club.Of course many fail to realize they can still use their decoder equipped locomotives at home on their DC layout.
I will say this..At first glance a DCC controller does look complicated with all its number buttons so,I can understand some of the resistence..
Larry
Conductor.
Summerset Ry.
"Stay Alert, Don't get hurt Safety First!"
The reason a town of 15 has only 14 churches is because one guy is an atheist.
I don't know how your club operates, but it would seem that this is something you vote on. The smaller side either accepts the result or leaves.
Good luck
Wonder if the resisting members have a large investment in expensive brass that would be awkward to convert. That often leads to the kind of resistance you're talking about.
The solution of wiring a DCC system to one of the DC "cab" ports is workable, but if you have really bad wiring that causes problems, DCC will not help.
One local club had its DC system of mainline cabs wired up in an elegant "star" pattern (designed and installed by an Intel engineer of some experience). Perfect for a DCC conversion, right? Nope. When they went to DCC, the new generation of members ripped out the hub and spoke wiring and installed a bizarre mish-mash of long feeders . . .
I've got a layout that is wired for "standard" two cab DC block control. I have simply changed one of the cabs over to DCC.
Why not have alternating run nights: DC and DCC?
Surely no one is going to get all piggy and say the layout ALWAYS has to be run one way.
This week it's DC. Next week it's DCC. If you don't want to play this week, come back next week.
Maybe they know something about the wiring that you don't know....and they want to keep it that way.
selectorEntire schools of thought, philosophies, religions, and cults have split into two, then four, and more camps for this very reason; new ways of seeing things, new leadership, or competition for recognition, power, and resources. When change is the sensible thing, many won't welcome it. They won't even agree that it is sensible. At some point, breaking up, or folding altogether, is the way to go. We tend to ally ourselves, and to seek the company of, those who feel about living the way we do.
Well said!
Dave
I'm just a dude with a bad back having a lot of fun with model trains, and finally building a layout!
Entire schools of thought, philosophies, religions, and cults have split into two, then four, and more camps for this very reason; new ways of seeing things, new leadership, or competition for recognition, power, and resources. When change is the sensible thing, many won't welcome it. They won't even agree that it is sensible. At some point, breaking up, or folding altogether, is the way to go. We tend to ally ourselves with, and to seek the company of, those who feel about living the way we do.
Sounds like a very awkward situation. My club fortunately does not suffer that problem. Our new permanent layout will be DCC exclusively, as is our portable layout, and as was our previous permanent layout. There hasn't been any argument about it as far as I know even though a couple of members do not have DCC at home.
One young member who has a severe lack of funds does not have any DCC equipment. I'm going to offer to put a decoder in one of his locomotives so he can run on the club layout. He has learning disabilities so he can't install a decoder himself. I hope that will make him feel more involved in the club. Right now he sits on the sidelines.
Can you run DCC at all? If so, maybe offering to help your DC members install decoders in one or two locomotives might bridge the gap.
Then again, 'someone' could accidentally attach a regular 120v wall plug to the DC wiring and plug it into a wall. The club would then have to come to an agreement on how to rewire the layout, that is if it survives the fire!
Maybe I should of added in the original post, we're down two members but its heading for a split if something doesn't happen. The layout has wiring failing and the DC folks refuse to give up all their wiring and switches to help make the layout as a whole more user friendly and have a simple wiring diagram.
If you're not losing members and people are still having fun, they're doing something right.
It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse.
Like I stated in the headline, what makes a club dysfunctional? Mine has taken 4 years to renovate an area of the layout that is about 2.5ft by 12ft long. All the while trying to simplfy the wiring of the layout to a more DCC friendly arrangement with the DC folks fighting every step of the way and ending up winning in the name of appeasing them.