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Yes, I have more than one throttle on my layout. Visually, all are throttled down.As Jbub suggested, I did take the decoder out and put the locomotive on the track. It sat perfectly still.Comment- Ok then loco is ok.I don't know if this was a valid test (my electronics knowledge is limited!), but I took the decoder out, carefully attached wires between my track and the pads that would touch the loco frame. I then used my old Life-Like track tester (basically 2 wires, a plastic housing and a lamp) and touched the wires to the pads that would make contact with the motor leads. The lamp illuminated. I then did the same with another decoder I had recently retired. When I touched the tester wires to the motor pads, no light. Comment - hmmm. That behavior doesn’t sound right so I think decoder is still sending msg to motor to run and maybe a short on the decoder components ( rectifier bridge) or it’s not fully reset from previous programming. When you did a reset did you interrupt the power afterwards, (That is remove it from track supply) ?Am I right that power should only flow through to the motor pads when a signal is sent to the decoder to allow a certain amount of power to be sent to the motor? If that's correct, doesn't this also suggest that the decoder I am having the issue with is letting full power flow through to the motor pads (which would cause my engine to run wild?) Would this also suggest that the decoder got fried somehow? Comment- see earlier comment but it could be a fried decoder.Just throwing this out there - After I had swapped decoders between my 2 locos, I put this one on my programming track to read back the loco address. It came up with the address of the loco I removed it from. So I changed the 4 digit address to the new loco it was in. I noticed when it was writing the new address that the motor started for a brief moment and moved the loco maybe 1/4" to 1/2" on the programming track. Not sure I've seen that before. Might that have had something to do with my predicament?Comment- ah, seems as if old loco address was still in it then it didn’t fully reset. Suggest try another reset and fully remove power to the decoder after for a couple of minutes and try again before giving up on the decoder.Thanks,Bart
Have replied below as addendums to your post. Hope it helps.
Additional follow-up...I changed the loco address to 004 and checked it. (Did this since the address was already 03 and wanted a way to confirm the reset that was going to be done worked)I did another decoder reset. Removed from track for a few minutes.Checked address and it was now 03 (shows me the reset was successful).Put on the main and applied power.I still have a runaway.It is starting to sound like the decoder got fried somehow when I moved it from one loco that it was working in and moved it into the other locomotive. It wouldn't be the first decoder that I have fried (done this once or twice before out of 50+ installs ). Does this sound plausible?Thanks,Bart
Just throwing this out there - After I had swapped decoders between my 2 locos, I put this one on my programming track to read back the loco address. It came up with the address of the loco I removed it from. So I changed the 4 digit address to the new loco it was in. I noticed when it was writing the new address that the motor started for a brief moment and moved the loco maybe 1/4" to 1/2" on the programming track. Not sure I've seen that before. Might that have had something to do with my predicament?Thanks,Bart
Sorry to say but yes.
MK is right except NCE decoders come with yellow tape.See photo.You want only the Frame tabs to touch the frame. You can apply the tape to the underside of the decoder but you would have to make a cut out so the motor tabs can contact the motor terminals. I usually stick the tape to the frame and trim once stuck in place. (Attachment Link) Is there a chance of the motor terminals being pressed sideways and touching the frame. If yes, then wrap some caption tape around the frame in those places too.