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... I'm just powering the Atlas car off the track power. Once it's up around 6 volts, it runs and cleans well...
External mounting of the decoder is genius! Put it on top, fabricate a box around it with maybe a hunk of screen material on sides or top, and it'll look like any number of Rube Goldberg maintenance contraptions deployed on 1:1. EDIT: Heck, use the lighting function outputs for strobes! Oh, this is going to be way too much fun.
I have two of the Atlas/Tomix vacuum cars which have not been put to work yet. Your point is a not-obvious obvious - the vacuums are most effective at full throttle, cannot be run on DCC without conversion, yet on DC if you run at full throttle the train will move too fast to do the job.External mounting of the decoder is genius! Put it on top, fabricate a box around it with maybe a hunk of screen material on sides or top, and it'll look like any number of Rube Goldberg maintenance contraptions deployed on 1:1. EDIT: Heck, use the lighting function outputs for strobes! Oh, this is going to be way too much fun.
When I need heavy cleaning, I'll just get to work with the brightboys, but I'd like something to periodically run to do some upkeep.
Pete, I bought this at the Amherst train show. I didn't buy the entire cleaning kits as I can push this myself with a stick or figure out a what to mount it under a freight car.http://woodlandscenics.woodlandscenics.com/show/Item/TT4552/page/1They have the more abrasive grade blocks too for the stubborn layout.http://woodlandscenics.woodlandscenics.com/show/Item/TT4551/page/1Entire kit.http://woodlandscenics.woodlandscenics.com/show/Item/TT4550/page/1I have not open my package yet to feel it but visually it looks like a block of very fine pumice or something of the like. Certainly much much finer than a bright boy. A bright boy may do the job but it leaves fairly large, but microscopic, gouges on the tracks and creating pits for more dirt to be trapped. Then you need to bright the tracks again, catch-22.I may give it a shot tomorrow since we'll probably be snowed in in the metro NYC area.
So I ran it over a small section of my layer which has been dormant for 5 years. With bare fingers, not much of a residue was transferred. But with this block, wow! I was surprised how much it picked up. Time to do some manual work.
So the only way to know if the tracks are "clean" is to run some trains and see if they stutter or the lights flicker?