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Interesting . . .I wonder if the sound (chuffs) were generated in that PFM "box" and the chuff frequency was proportional to the track voltage (not directly synchronized with the drivers). The audio was then send to the loco through the rails (by AM modulation of high frequency voltage injected into the track voltage, and the electronics in the tender just filtered the sound portion of the voltage at the rails and played it through the speaker. Similar to the constant lighting circuits popular around that time, except this was "audio through the rails". This is just pure speculation on my part. I drooled all over th PFM system as a teen and they were all cam operated .,..MikeNot a valid %s URLIf you know for sure that there was a cam in the loco, then I suspect that the PFM box was just like those constant lighting circuits, and it supplied high frequency voltage through the track to the sound generator in the model which they rectified it, and powered the on-board sound generator. That probably consisted of a white noise generator, audio amp, and some sort of audio-attenuation coupled to the chuff cam to produce those "chiuff" bursts of white noise synchronized with the drivers.
I hate texting ! I drooled over the PFM system in the 70's and definitely remember them being cam operated ...Mike
Thanks for the info Mike. So the "box" likely provided power to the circuit inside the loco. Probably similar to the high frequency signal for constant lighting. It is interesting to discover what kind of technology was being utilized before DCC.