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Ok clearly I was overthinking it. I was thinking I had to run 3 auto reversers, one for each loop and cutting in the insulators on the end of the yard tracks on the right side. What I don't understand is if an engine is traveling left to right on one section of the tracks and another loco enters the yard off the main and the auto reverser flips polarity how is every engine moving in the yard not affected by that? Would things still work as you guys say if I was using wheels with resistors on them throughout the trains for block detection?
... Then feed the entire yard off of any auto-reverse circuit. It's very unlikely that you'll overload something like a DCC Specialties PSX-AR.
What I don't understand is if an engine is traveling left to right on one section of the tracks and another loco enters the yard off the main and the auto reverser flips polarity how is every engine moving in the yard not affected by that?
In DCC, the track polarity has no effect on the travel direction of the loco, so all the locos inside the loop will not behave any differently, regardless of the reversing section's phase. Remember, DCC track power is a voltage that flips polarity many times a second.Resistor wheels should not matter either. What flips the polarity of a reversing section is the instant short when a metal wheel shorts the gap between the mainline and the reverse section while they are powered by out of phase voltage. The reverse senses that short, and flips the reversing section to be in phase with the mainline.
I always wondered about this, as in, why is an auto-reverser even needed with DCC? So this is the trick? It's just a matter of the two sections being out of phase? And all the auto-reverser does in a DCC system is align the two phases?
I agree that it's just one big reverse loop. I think you can just put gaps at the red ticks here:Then feed the entire yard off of any auto-reverse circuit. It's very unlikely that you'll overload something like a DCC Specialties PSX-AR.
The reason I suggested power districts on the output side of the reverser is we're dealing with yards here.
Now... speaking of derailments, etc., let's talk about all those curved turnouts.