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Can you narrow down which component(s) smoked? Maybe post a closeup photo?Strange thing is that you were able to program it fine, and you said it even moved (motor ran) for an instant. Yes, it was most likely a short between something and something else. Need more info. Most likely the short was between the motor pickup strips and the rail pickup strips (yes, I see you used the Kapton tape, but I really, really dislike that installation method.Route the motor leads differently. This requires modification to the stock light board, but the motor leads will be safely away from the rail pickup strips.Grind notches in the rail pickups. After installing the light board, the motor leads cannot touch the rail pickups. No Kapton!
...Your second picture is what I was thinking about doing, but I like the first idea better... (Attachment Link)
It smoked right here, this little chip that's circled.
I tried the second idea before and found that the motor contacts simply fell/leaned inward more (spring action?) and still made contact with the pickup strip despite the notches. I believe this was on a Kato P42, which appears to be a similar setup (is that a P42?). I like the first idea though. Might try that next time.
Ok, that changes the diagnosis: you have let the magic smoke out of the audio amplifier. So, the short is somewhere around the speaker connections. Either the speaker leads are shorted to each other, or shorted to something else.
Since only one wire is soldered on the speaker connection, maybe the end of that wire touched the chassis or rail when testing or programing?
Good catch - I didn't notice that only 1 speaker wire was attached. Chassis on those models should be electrically neutral, but if it touched a live rail then - POOF!