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I'm so dumb I Googled "LCC" and still don't know what it is. Landscape conservation cooperatives
That's how I read all this - that the supply to all the LCC devices is completely separated from the DCC for the track.And by the way, I see nothing wrong with using an old computer ATX power supply. They are regulated, they put out a lot of current with a very stable voltage, they can be had cheaply, usually have built-in overload protection, and if one ever dies on you, you can change it out by just grabbing another ATX power supply. What's not to like?
... I also didn't know that LCC still uses DCC signals - I thought it was its own protocol and power distribution system (but I have to admit that I didn't closely familiarize myself with LCC).
Where did you read this? AFAIK, LCC is its own protocol and bus architecture, based on CAN bus. "Power points" are low-current (0.5A, IIRC) supply points on the bus wiring, which uses regular Ethernet cables, RJ45 connectors on CAT5 cable. Recall that I was investigating LCC for a while and then wised-up.LCC is a camel, if you recall the idiom. If there's any relationship to DCC, it's a very distant cousin at best.
I have questions....I know NCE uses a polling type of bus where more decoders mean the control point has to wait for everything to check in before the next poll. But aren't the buses for Digitrax, Lenz, ESU and others push based? Wouldn't this negate the entire issue of slow response time?Why would you need feedback to the control point for track and signals which would have feedback via panel lights anyway?Why interface two different networks in the first place?This just seems like a solution begging for a problem. DCC has issues, but I don't see how this fixes any of them.Now if this supplanted DCC with CAN Bus, I could see the point - simplified decoder programming, functions operate the same across manufacturers, replacing CVs with something - ANYTHING - a bit more user friendly. But this doesn't do any of that.