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This time the problem child is an N scale Kate P42 Genesis locomotive.I chose the solder the contacts option, put the loco on the test track and it ran perfectly. Then I put the shell back on it and it would not move at all.Any suggestions regarding where to start debugging this issue will be greatly appreciated.Ed
...How about the truck-to-chassis pickup strips?...
...soldered the motor contracts to the pads on the dcc board. No other soldering was performed...
I installed a Digitrax decoder and soldered the motor contracts to the pads on the dcc board. No other soldering was performed.This has been sitting on my to do bench for almost a year, so I am not 100% certain whether the lights were responsive or not, but I believe they were as I usually test everything before I put the shell back on.Yesterday, I un-solderd the board (inspired by a recent thread) and plan to reinstall the board this weekend.I guess, I am mainly looking for things to check so that I don't end up in the same situation.
On all my KATO P42 and E8/9 I soldered the brass strips coming from the motor and get rid of the small plastic grey clip .But sometimes without the cab everything is fine but as soon as I put back the cab I loose the power to the loco ....I found that the front headlight have to be bent a little down because it's touching the cab and it lift the DCC board just enough to loose power from the rear truck .
I think you want to solder the brass strips AND keep the grey clip. You are likely losing power from the trucks to the board without the clip to hold the board in place.
I'm not so sure that the gray removeable clip is doing that. I've seen many people install the decoder on a P42 get intermittent results because they did not push the decoder back far enough (push down while pushing back) so the rear stationary clip catches the board. The rear stationary clip needs to catch the board to force the board down to touch the pickup strips.Unfortunately you can solder the motor tabs to the pads reqardless of whether the rear clip is catching the board or not. Many just place the board down, bend the clips and solder without observing the back end.
By the way, whoever did the soldering in the TCS example picture used WAY more solder than necessary.
On further thought, I think it's best to use the push-in clip, but probably not 100% necessary. Note that the push-in clip engages the grey plastic slot betwen the two solder points. That said, the paramount thing is to ensure that the board is engaged in the rear clip BEFORE soldering.Or - use Pete's method (jumpers from the truck contacts to the decoder, and then clips don't matter.By the way, whoever did the soldering in the TCS example picture used WAY more solder than necessary.
I'm not so sure that the gray removeable clip is doing that. I've seen many people install the decoder on a P42 get intermittent results because they did not push the decoder back far enough (push down while pushing back) so the rear stationary clip catches the board. The rear stationary clip needs to catch the board to force the board down to touch the pickup strips.Unfortunately you can solder the motor tabs to the pads reqardless of whether the rear clip is catching the board or not. Many just place the board down, bend the clips and solder without observing the back end.Here's a close up of the rear clip on the right, courtesy of TCS' website:Their full picture install:http://tcsdcc.com/installation/n-scale/kato-p42-all-phases/k0d8