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Interesting.I own a Pricom Designs Pocket Tester, which is basically a DCC packet analyzer which monitors (in real time), the packet being broadcast over the rails. I have snooped on Easy DCC and NCE layouts ant the command station sends refresh packets to all the locos in-use on the track (the ones dialed up on the throttles) whether there are any changes at the throttle or not. So, that loco running at speed step 40 will get regular updates over the rails.I also had the Pocket Tester monitoring a Digitrax layout, and I think it behaved just like the other systems (was broadcasting refresh packets, with with no changes in any of the loco's parameters), but that was a while ago, and I don't remember it clearly. I would think that something like refresh packets timing cycle woudl be defined in the DCC specs and all the manufacturers would adhere to it.I do agree that on large layouts with lots of active locos on the layout, the refresh loop cycle can be longer, so maybe in that instance BLI locos can reach their packet timeout value. Why not just increase the timeout value, instead of disabling it?
Curious how this would affect a BLI loco running on a DC layout?
EDIT: Disregard... I looked up the Pricom DCC Tester and this would be a good tool to track down the root cause of the packet loss causing the timeout issue.I've always been curious if it's an issue unique to Digitrax and QSI.. or if it's a layout network architecture or wiring issue.~Ian
I'd imagine the poor sales are due to many people thinking 'JMRI does that for free'.. not knowing that JMRI just sees packets at the network level.. not the track level.. (Or poor advertising..)It would be nice if they made a version that interfaced with a computer.~Ian
Pocket tester was out before JMRI got popular.It does interface with a computer, but basically it does a live packet dump via serial port. Old school. We are going back to 2005 (IIRC). I tried it, but haven't used it again. I find just using the built-in display quite sufficient.This thing does it all - measures voltages, packet timing, errors, etc., etc., right at the track. Download the manual and check out all the features.
My computer doesn't even have a serial port, that is very old school. Scott
Um... a USB port is a kind of serial port. That's what the S stands for.
I actually don't like that LCD display - it has poor contrast, and it isn't back-lit. One of my future projects is to figure out how to use a nicer display with a backlight. But that wont' happen for quite some time. I did communicate with PriCom about this, and they said that they won't re-spin the design using a currently available display, and IIRC the reason was that they don't want to spent development time on a product which didn't sell very well. Too bad.