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Don’t know if these are “different” motors, but the new ones I’ve now seen / worked on do seem to be much smoother than the loco I bought 5 years ago (my original video showing the CV settings).
Yeah, I've never been impressed with their auto-tune feature in any loco I've tried it in. Most of my locos ran way more erratically afterwards and ran way better with just the default motor CV settings. Plus, I don't like the loco taking off like a rocket from a dead stop during the auto-tune. Talk about a good way to crack that flywheel doughnut!
Looks good Rick! Are you implying that this run of FEF-3s uses different coreless motor (or different gearing) than the previous run?I also suspect that this loco could go faster than 50MPH at full throttle. Probably closer to 90MPH, or faster. Did you limit the speed by CV settings, or that is that the fastest the model can do at 12V?
It's hard to tell, but I think the spacing of the opening would work okay. There should be little or none that needs to be removed.
Otto, I think it is the sound file itself. I tried using multiple throttles, including wifi and PC based DecoderPro with mouse, and none allow for real short successive blasts. I can get a dit-daaaahhhh, as the second trails off, but not a dit-dit sound. The final blast always wants to “finish with a flourish”I went for the computer and screen based throttles, to eliminate any potential mushiness due to the physical throttle buttons.
Thanks, Rick, but that's kind of a bummer. In the days before radio, ie the Steam Era (hello? This IS a steam loco) whistles were THE way to communicate among crews. There were pages and pages of whistle signals listed in operating rules to communicate everything from simple start .. to increase train heat ...... Not being able to do short blasts without unwanted "flourish" would be disappointing...Otto
Old thread, but I figured I'd ask here for continuity because it is about the 58741 board: I know AUX1 and AUX2 have resistors on their outputs, and AUX6 is Logic Level (requires a FET);Do AUX3/4/5 also have resistors on the output or are separate resistors needed?
I used AUX 3 for a LED to light up the ditchlights, and I did have to install a resistor. Learned it the smokey way... Unfortunately the instruction sheet has room for improvement, as it doesn't really mention anything about the differences between AUX1/2 and the rest.Chris