0 Members and 4 Guests are viewing this topic.
At least part of my problem has for sure been dirty track (I tried a few non-BLI locos to verify). But I can't seem to get more than an hour or two out of the BLI's before they start misbehaving again, so I think I'm just going to return them. I'm used to having to baby BLI's, but this is above and beyond the call of duty.-Mark
Please tell me where you got the new axle and the procedure to replace it! I have a first-run E7 that I want to pull more cars.
Before you box them up... try one thing. Run them until they mysteriously start to slow down and sputter. Then, do nothing and let them sit for an hour, then try to run them again. That will be a strong indicator that it's a heat problem.
Mark you may be pumping too much volts to the track.... Over the years I have found that most n decoders love to run somewhere between 11.5 to 12.7 volts . I actually left one engine run all week when I forgot to shut it down when I left for a business trip. it still runs to this day with no issues. engine runs cool. All the BL engines I have running now are still running cool to the touch and I measured the temp with a IR pyrometer and found that the temperature rise is only abut 2 degrees.
Mark, I may have gotten a bit lost. Is the testing you were doing prior to deciding to return the units on the E units or the F units?
Does BLI have HO scale problems?
Well, that brings up a good question. The BLI site advertises the F3's in both N scale and HO, but "images are unavailable" for the HO version. Are they out yet? Do the HO shells have the same screwup with the grills reversed and the inverted truss gussets? Otto K.
One more idea... these are now radio equipped right? To power the layout sub. I wonder if this is causing some issues itself. Maybe deactivating this feature, or removing or extending the antenna would help. I know an antenna out of phase with it's power source can cause it to overheat and even cause internal feedback issues.
The amp is the part I think may be the issue.http://spookshow.net/loco/blif3f7.htmlThat blue wire is the transmission antenna for the radio receiver on the Paragon3 layout sub.I know from experience that if you remove the antenna, it can cause overheating and damage to the transmitter.