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I discussed this in the thread Peteski cited, but I'll repeat it here.The Pace soldering station (the ST50, which I mention in that thread, has been replaced by the ADS200, slightly cheaper) and in particular the Pace TD100 (TD200 for the ADS 200 system) handpiece, has been a God-send. The reason is simple: the TD100 handpiece is like holding a Montblanc fountain pen. That in turn means that you have incredible control of the tip to get it exactly where you want it. 1/32" pads on a decoder are no problem.You can get a variety of tips for the Pace, but the one I use most often is the 1/64" conical "sharp" tip. I've found that the 1/32" is a bit big for soldering wires to decoder pads, but the 1/64" is just about perfect. I do use a 1/32" chisel tip occasionally. The tips are relatively cheap and last a very long time. My first one lasted for over a year of daily use. I'm on my second as of a couple of weeks ago.The other benefit of the Pace is near-instantaneous heat. It takes less than 10 seconds to reach operating temperature. It's a pleasure to be able to flip the switch on and be ready to go. That means you don't have to keep the unit powered up (and hot) all the time, saving tip life and the occasional burned finger.It's not cheap, but I've not seen any other system that has as small a handpiece as the Pace. I can't imagine working on ESU LokSound decoders without it. And you WILL be soldering wires directly to decoder pads (or the Next18 adapter board) regularly if you want to do neat installations, connect keep alives, and take advantage of the additional function output pads that are available.John C.
Thanks, thinking long term I have a lot of locos to convert to DCC or DCC/Sound - so the Pace might well be worth it.
Still waiting on the Lokprogrammer ...
...My first install was gonna be a 73100 into a de-snooted Kato snoot SD40-2 (based on Kelley's install below), but I understand that you should install the sound files prior (?)...
Quote from: Mark5 on January 08, 2021, 12:05:42 PMMy first install was gonna be a 73100 into a de-snooted Kato snoot SD40-2 (based on Kelley's install below), but I understand that you should install the sound files prior (?)Negative. If you have a LokProgrammer, you can absolutely install sound files after the 73100 has been installed in a loco.
My first install was gonna be a 73100 into a de-snooted Kato snoot SD40-2 (based on Kelley's install below), but I understand that you should install the sound files prior (?)
Negative. If you have a LokProgrammer, you can absolutely install sound files after the 73100 has been installed in a loco.
With a wired decoder it's usually easier to install the sound file before because you don't have to worry about less than optimal connections through the loco's wheels, chassis, etc. But it's not required. With the 73100 and 73199 unless you have a set of clamps that give you a good connection it's easier to load it after installing. There was talk once of 3D printing a jig to hold the decoder for testing/programming but, given the circumstances, probably a moot point now.The other thing is if you plan on putting much more than 440µf of keep alive in it then you probably want to load the sound file before hooking up the caps. Or also adding the inductor to bypass it.
a bare minimum. just some generic junkI've had luck simply soldering jumper wires to the 73100 and 73199 boards (track and motor contact pads), and then speaker. Hook them to the LokTester, and all worked fine.
Does the 73100 have any resident sounds that would enable me to test the speaker?
Yes, that's the one I use. But I replaced the crappy 1" speaker with one of my cell-phone-type speakers in its own enclosure, so I can hear the sounds as they will actually sound in the loco (more or less; when a speaker is installed in a diesel shell or steam tender, you tend to get a bit more reverb and a tiny bit more lower-midrange emphasis in the sound - it generally sounds a bit better installed than out on the bench).John C.