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So, 30 loaded hoppers and a cabin. Nice!But it's shorting out in turnouts (I know, Peco turnouts are tight) and it also acts like it's not getting pickup from all of its wheels.More tuning of track and loco...
I'll check that. For now I put a dab of Floquil rail paint on the railhead just a hair beyond each frog and that's working. But yeah, once I'm done playing around I need to check the gauge on all the wheels.
Not like they're going to change it given the maturity of the product, but this is a really weak design issue. There is often a need to diddle with the sleep/op/run switch, but beyond first setup rarely ever the scale switch. That they're miniature toggles only a half-inch apart poses a risk to less robust decoders. The scale switch should've been one of those flush slide switches only changeable with a screwdriver.
In that case the tread might be too wide. On Peco turnouts the rails exiting the frog are very close to each other and opposite polarity. Wheels with flat (not tapered) and wide tread will touch both of those rails, causing a short.One solution (if you have many trains which have wide tread wheels) is to grind down the railhead of those 2 rails (for about 1/8') then superglue a piece of styrene over that, then smooth it with a file. You will have a short piece of insulated track but it is so short that it should not cause any problems and where the track is exposed again, the adjacent opposite polarity tracks are far enough apart not to have wheels short them anymore.
I tried to talk to BLI a few months ago about the wide tread they use and got back a vacant stare. They are totally clueless as to how this could even be an issue.Please contact them and complain, otherwise it will never change.Jason
It's the Peco Insulfrogs... Shorting out every time the M1 passes over them. Looks like the wheel treads are wide enough to contact both rails at the insulated frog. Sigh.
For those of us who run primarily on N-Trak module layouts, this is not an option. A locomotive must be able to run on anything. Does this make the M1 a no-buy? This board made the Centipede an avoid at all costs.
The problem with the Peco Insulfrog is a well know problem. We had it already during the 80's on one of our layouts. I hate to say it (as I like the Peco track), but this is definitely a Peco issue and I wouldn't hold it against the M1. Marc