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Not to muddy up the waters here but I have a similar question. I have an ABA set of IM FP9's and was thinking of using one sound decoder but was wondering if you can put more that one speaker in. Such as one in each unit.Jon
Well here they are working as a team. I had to ada a diode to the A unit to match speed with the B unit:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qErwoi8ehXI&feature=youtu.beDecoders are not that cheap here in Argentina...nor they are easy to find.
I'm sure you can. However you would probably get nearly the same effect by putting the sound decoder in the B-unit, and non-sound decoders in the two A's. That said, the reason separate sound decoders sound great (rather than merely good) is because of the distinct and separate noises coming from each engine, such as the sound of the prime movers being out-of-sinc with each other or the air-pop-offs (whatever they're called) popping at different times separately in each locomotive. I notice this a lot in my A-B-A EMD E-9 COLA lashup in N-scale, which has sound decoders in both A-units, but not in the B.With what you are thinking, the identical sound would be coming from every engine.If you decide to do this, I'd suggest one speaker in the lead A-unit along with the decoder, another speaker in the trailing A-unit and no speaker in the B.However, if you want to afford it, sound decoders in both A's is the way to go IMO and is a lot less complicated than all that wire running and making up all those connectors...then hiding them.Cheerio!Bob Gilmore
Jon,if you were to run multiple speakers from a single speaker ouutput in a decoder then you have to consider the following:If you hook the speakers up in parallel their total impedance will be lower than a single speaker. If you hook two 8 ohm speakers in parallel then their impedance will be 4 ohms. Three will have 2.6 ohm impedance. You might overload the output stage of the audio amplifier on the decoder. If the amp is very robust it might still work but the sound might get distorted. Or you can actually blow out the output transistors once the volume is cranked up (especially with 3 speakers). But if you find speakers which have higher impedance than what the amp is rated for then you will be ok. For example if the amp is rated for 8 ohms and you find some 16 ohm speakers then two in parallle will have 8 ohm impedance - perfect match for the amp.If you hook the speaker up in series the impedance will be a sum of all the speaker impedances. If an am is rated for 8 orms and you hook up two 8 ohm speakers in series then they will present a 16 ohm load to the amp. That won't damage anythign but the amp will only be able to push half of its rated wattage to the speakers, so they will not be as loud. As in above example, you can choose the speaker impedance to match the amp. If you hook up two 4 ohm speakers in series then their total impedance will be 8 ohm - perfect match for the ampl.The problem with the multi-speaker setup is finding speakers with the impedance needed for them to have a matched impedance with the amp.But just for fun, if you have an amp rated for 8 ohms, you can get four 8 ohm speakers and hook 2 pairs in series (so each is 16 ohms), then those 2 pair sets in parallel. That results in a total impedance of 8 ohms, so you're good. Just make sure to hook them up so their polarity is not reversed, so the cones all move in the same direction. Polarity is important in any multi-speaker setup.Another alternative is to get the QSI Titan sound decoder. It is a stereo sound decoder (it has 2 audio amps and stereo sound recordings). It is designed for having 2 speakers. It also has a mixer so you can balance each type of sound between those speakers. It is a rather large (H0) decoder but you might be able to shoehorn it in a full width cab diesel.
What diode did you use and how did you calculate to find the correct one?