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If Danneman was doing this in analog then I can see how maybe it makes sense.
there's a better solution for DCC: control the head end and helpers separately. If the helpers are pushing too much, notch the throttle down. If they're pushing too little, notch it up.
Aside from waiting for something to go to the ground, how do you know when (and how much) to adjust the throttle -- just by watching the slack? What about when the train is in a tunnel or hidden staging? Also, observing slack in N scale seems hard enough even with MT couplers, but how would that work with the LEZ or TSC couplers that are significantly smaller and have a lot less visible slack?Ed
Watching where the slack is taken up and communication with the head end are the keys. Good running equipment does not hurt either. For the successful helpers ops I've been involved with the helper goes onto the train at a visible location, the train is visible the entire run, save for short stretches of tunnel (12-18" max) and the helper comes off at a visible location. The process of cutting in the helpers (important in the caboose era but not so much for modern ops) adds more fun value to the session as the dispatcher must coordinate the helper moves with following / opposing traffic.
Aside from waiting for something to go to the ground, how do you know when (and how much) to adjust the throttle -- just by watching the slack?
What about when the train is in a tunnel or hidden staging?
Also, observing slack in N scale seems hard enough even with MT couplers, but how would that work with the LEZ or TSC couplers that are significantly smaller and have a lot less visible slack?
It is quite exciting that the heavy infrastructure lifting is behind you. The scenery is going to transform the layout.
The last ops session on Apr 22 left me with a set of 3 construction priorities to prepare for this weekend's RMMBC events. In order, they were:1. Make the gate at Caliente operable, so that dozens of open house guests wouldn't have to crawl in to see the layout.2. Power-up Allard siding.3. Power-up the Tortoises in Bakersfield so the turnouts wouldn't have to be hand-thrown by the host.Bakersfield from below: Thanks for looking.
That underneath shot gives me the wiring beebee jeebees.
Not to mention the heebie-jeebies. Cheers!Marc - Riverside
Your layout is coming along fantastically, Gary! My wiring is fairly neat, too, but yours makes mine look like the proverbial rat's nest!...BTW, be careful with CATS. It's horribly addictive!
That underneath shot gives me the wiring heebee jeebees.
The key is to break the job down into simple steps.