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Thanks for the reply, Pete. But, does it really even make a difference? Please excuse my ignorance in electronics, since I'll probably use the wrong terms, but, let's say I cut a gap in the rails in one spot on the loop. It seems to me that a locomotive crossing that gap, for a brief moment, is getting hit with the DCC signal from both sides that may not be in the same phase, i.e., the DCC signal on those two separate pieces of rails are coming from different parts of the DCC bus. Wouldn't that actually be more of a problem? I haven't had a problem without these gaps before, so is this really even a issue? Maybe, as you pointed out, the small size of my typical layout makes this a non-issue.Thanks,DFF
Glad this post came up as I'm planning on converting one or both tracks on my mainline to DCC at some point and they run in a rather large, continuous, bowl-of spaghetti-type loop with even a helix in there. I already converted a much smaller industrial branchline loop that already happened to have a couple insulated gaps in it for electrofrog turnouts, so I haven't had any problems. The mainline has no gaps...no, I never got around setting up power districts or isolated blocks...so I could've easily run into some problems with the conversion to DCC I suppose.