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Earlier in the thread, you indicated the passing siding went dead. Was that solved? Does it bear on the problem with the loco, or coincidental?
Rich, is it possible that the locomotive drivers "locked up" when the decoder and the siding feed failed, and the truck melted? Maybe an over-current condition occurred that was below the level at which your DCC system would trip. Perhaps this was caused by the motor stalling? If so, I think I know what caused the drivers to stop turning.
I don't see how a lack of pickup would cause any heating, smoking or melting anywhere in the model. At least that is what I recall the problem was (without re-reading the entire thread). What you describe is an open while the "smoke events" are caused by shorts which allow high currents to pass through the model causing the electrical components to heat up enough to melt or burn (pretty much become an electric heater). If some wheels (or parts of the model) did not pickup electricity, that would not cause excessive current to flow anywhere. If the loco was not picking up power then the tender would still get the power to the model (but that would not have caused an excessive current which would melt anything). Only several amps of current (much more than the model will ever need) could cause heating and melting.
I'd contact the repair dept and ask to speak with the supervisor . I forget her name , but she was very helpful with one of my locos . I would think if you talked to her you could get them to send you the tender they have in the parts dept .
Dang, same loco numbers... Looks like if I want more, I'll have to be ready to break out the grinder to get those numbers off the cab.
Bummer. It would have been nice to have different numbers. I would have bough another or more if they had different numbers.Scott