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Dear Mister 'the S',My (admittedly very limited ;D) understanding of current DCC technology is that 28 and 128 speed steps are actually derived one from each other, the higher being a sort of 'fractioning' of the basic 28 speed steps range, to give finer control.Mostly deals with throttle rather than decoder configuration if I'm not mistaken.If the decoder supports 28 speed steps, you can go 128 if your throttle/command station support 128 speed steps (guess very few doesn't today)Hum, time to dive into my foxhole I guess ;D)Marc
I believe you are referencing status editing on the throttle. This means the throttle will throw out commands at 128 resolution (really just bits), but the decoder will still operate at 28 speedsteps.
Of course, above speed step 1, acceleration is much quicker (momentum settings notwithstanding) with 28 steps than with 128 ;DFWIW, I understand the 128 speed steps as a kind of 'built in throttle inertia' if it does make sense
S,Does the B-mann heavy Mountain's decoder supports Back-EMF ?Just found out this afternoon while playing with my Digitraxx F and FT decoders settings that lowering the B-EMF (from default 6 to 4, 3 or 2) would somewhat improved (smoothed out) speed at lower steps (nominally step 1 and 2).Problem is that operations at speed step 1 are different whether engines run light or with 20 bad rolling, plastic wheels equipped cars trailing ;D so what works for one situation doesn't necessirally work for an other.Marc
Yes a lower BEMF value will improve lower speed operation but BEMF isn't an equalizer for speedsteps, in slow speed operation.
FWIW, Digitraxx (and TCS ?) offer some further tweaking of BEMF settings with CV#56 and 57.From what I've understood, those CV are supposed to address 'speed jump(s)' ???