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Is the 1300 a current MRC product? If not, when was it discontinued?The other question begging be asked is how many model railroaders do you personally know which were affected by the alleged problem with 1300 and Rapido decoders? None, one, ten, 30, 100?
It is not that bad. The (only) alleged problem might occur when decoders are used on DC with DC throttles that use pulsing DC (unfiltered output from a full-wave rectifier). That is when the decoder's built-in filter capacitors will smooth out the pulsing DC to be closer to the peak voltage (rather than RMS voltage).When decoders are used in their intended (DCC) environment, they are much safer. DCC signal is a square wave which is highly unlikely to get neat the maximum rated voltage. Its peak and RMS values are the same.Let's not overthink this or have knee jerk reaction to a problem that none of us heard of until the Rapido's MRC 1300 warning was somehow brought to our attention. If you run your trains with DCC you have nothing to worry about. How many people buy DCC equipment to exclisively run them in DC and also have a MRC 1300 throttle? I think a very small number of modelers.To me Rapido's problem is more an exception than a rule. And we don't even know if anything was proven scientifically by Rapido. HAve they actually done some scientific tasts? Do they know what component is failing? What are their decoders specs for max safe operating voltage?Even this thread, while informative and enligtening, doesn't prove that 1300 blows up decoders. ALl we know it is that 1300 seems to have slightly higher output voltage than few other DC throttles. But we haven't even tested it powering a DCC-sound-equipped loco to see how much lower the output voltage is under more than 50mA of load.
Is the 1300 a current MRC product? If not, when was it discontinued?
The other question begging be asked is how many model railroaders do you personally know which were affected by the alleged problem with 1300 and Rapido decoders? None, one, ten, 30, 100?
According to the MRC website, both the 1300 and 1370 are shown as out-of-stock but can be backordered.http://www.modelrectifier.com/product-p/aa300.htmhttp://www.modelrectifier.com/product-p/aa370.htmJason from Rapido stated that they had at least 100 failed decoders, which they attribute to use of the 1300/1370.https://www.therailwire.net/forum/index.php?topic=44120.msg566142#msg566142
If we are to play a detective, it would be *REALLY* useful to know what are the electrical specs for Rapido decoders and what components failed on them. Something we will probably never know (unless one of the Railwire member has a Rapido model with a disposable ESU decoder and a MRC 1300 throttle), and is willing to kill the decoder and let me do a postmortem. All the ESU decoders I reverse-engineered had a what appears to be a Zener diode installed at the output of the bridge rectifier. I'm not certain it is a Zener, but from my knowledge of circut design, a Zener diode makes sense. I have not taken it out of the circuit to verify if it is a Zener, and what is its breakdown voltage. Its purpose seems to be to shunt any excessive voltages. I wonder if the common failed component is that diode, and possibly one or more of the bridge rectifier diodes.
That's good information! A diode is the sort of thing that *will* fail if the peak voltage exceeds its peak rating.But a peak rating of 25v? Other power packs are hitting peaks around 20v. So is the difference in blowing a diode really only 5 volts? Could be. And remember, with minimal load on it, that power pack is peaking at 25v. It wouldn't surprise me at all to see a very tiny load from a decoder when it first turns on. And people running a DCC-equipped engine on a DC power pack are exactly the people who would be running power pack full-out because of the voltage drop from the decoder. Many DCC engines will move very slowly at full throttle on a DC power pack.
Do we need someone to regulate what model railroaders can buy, or use?
The operating voltage of N scale DC locos is defined (regulated?) as 0-12V DC. If someone makes a power pack which produced 0-17V or 0-22V then who is wrong? The manufacturers of the 0-12V locos or of the throttle that produces excessive voltage at its output?
Generally speaking, if a component has a voltage rating then it should withstand that RMS voltage even if wave peaks are significantly higher. It other words, decoders with a 12V rating shouldn't be failing from being used with a PWM throttle that delivers high wave peaks but still maxes at 12V RMS.
I don't think that makes any sense, once you drop the assumption that the wave form is sinusoidal and the frequency is from rectified 60 hertz AC power. Obviously, one could design a wave with a periodicity of 1 cycle per second with a peak voltage of 1000 volts, but still keep the RMS to 12 volts. A square wave with a pulse width of 0.012 seconds would do that. So, should every tiny electronic device that can handle 12 volts RMS with a sine wave at 120 cps still be able to handle that? Probably not.There are now "DC" power packs that do essentially what a DCC decoder does in the way of sensing BEMF and pulsing the track power to get smooth motor operation at slow rpm. Is that power on the tracks always going to be compatible with every dual mode decoder that somebody might decide to run on DCC? Probably not, unless the people who make the power packs and the people who make the decoders agree on limits to the track voltage that make sense in terms of the time parameters relevant to the decoder circuits.