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What's the basic concept here? Microcontroller raw chips, some sort of programmer to load it with brains, and wiring into it's inputs and outputs?
He has a bunch of similar stuff including some tiny N scale locoshttps://www.youtube.com/@diorama111/videosThey all seem to use stepper motors and IC chips.
Ah, that explains that weird noise when the model is running. Stepper motors are noisy because they do not rotate smoothly, but step many times per each shaft revolution. At higher rotational speeds, that gets rather loud. That also explains the excellent slow speed performance since stepper motors can easily be driven to spin very, very slow.
And nobody has mentioned this yet, but apparently, he can get enough batter life out of that little rechargeable LiPO to make this practical? I wonder how long it can run on a charge. He has built a "dead rail" N Scale loco here.
Deadrail? Who wants to keep regularly recharging locomotives and illuminated cars. I that really better than cleaning track? Having a bank of chargers and plug everything in all the time? Just image the maintenance on a large layout where about dozen of locos operate at any give time, along with 3 dozen of illuminated passenger cars. Who wants to corral all those units at the end of the session from all around the layout, just to "plug them in".I think that all the modern rechargeable computing devices like smart phones, tablets watches, headphones, etc. kind of brainwashed people into thinking that frequent charging is quite acceptable. I don't like it.What's really needed is a compromise between powered rails and battery operation. Leave rails powered to charge the model's internal power storage. Basically really high capacity but miniature keep-alive circuit. That way the track doesn't have to be very clean to keep the keep-alive's charge. And no periodic recharging off all your little trains.