0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
Yes, it is a resistor and if you are lucky, you should be able to re-solder it. I too was surprised that they used a cylindrical (not flat SMD chip) resistor. IIRC, it is 22 ohm (you can check the color bands, if curious). I suspect they used that type of resistor because it probably has a higher power dissipation rating than an equivalent flat resistor of he same footprint.And in my typical crumodgen way I like to mention that this post would be a better fit for the DCC section of the forum (since this is a decoder problem and if someone has a similar problem in the future, this info would likely be easier to locate in the DCC forum). That is my logic.
Sorry about that. I think I had this thread open in hopes that I could post my success here... and it ended up going pear-shaped. I will keep any further conversation on this decoder install in the DCC section.
Having shoveled a good bit of horse manure (literally as well as figuratively), I don't agree that horses go "splat" like cows do. Horse "road apples" are just sticky brown pellets maybe a couple of inches in diameter, which, for N scale, is only 0.0125". They are typically left in a pile somewhere around 1' in diameter, with some pellets loose and separated. They tend to get separated as they are kicked around, later. So, some dusty pellets scattered around a paddock are typical. For N scale, I am thinking coffee grounds, with a little attention to the grind to get a believable size, plus some diluted white glue to keep the piles together and the separated ones tacked down.
This is what I really like about TRW... If you have a question, someone who really knows their $hit will be able to provide the answer.I can confirm the above information is accurate, unfortunately having stepped in both.
Sorry those pictures don't have a ruler in it to give us a sense of "size".
Better (horse sh!t) modeling through peer pressure! Only on the Railwire Seriously Wolf, that's a nice scene!Otto
@SP Wolf, Where did you get the horsey stable building?