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You could use an HO (or O) Decoder's Motor outputs as your "DC" Controller.. (Program the decoder's Min-Mid-Max voltage to your liking so you don't overvolt the N scale locos) then everything is controlled within the DCC system (without using 00). (The HO or O decoder allows greater Amp Draw if needed before the decoder overloads.)~Ian
Just make sure that you never ever, ever,ever, ever allow a locomotive cross between live DC and DCC power blocks. Did I mention "never"? SInce we know that mistakes can and will happen, it would make sense to keep the DC and DCC parts of the layout completely separate (no possibility of crossing)....
I'm toying with the idea of making my upper loop convertible to DCC, since it's the Western Maryland line, and I still have a fleet of DCC locos that gather dust in the cabinet. Of course, my track plan is dirt simple, with no real need for engines to cross from one plane of existence to another. All of my switching is via "0-5-0" so there's no risk of putting the wrong power to the wrong engine... at least not for very long.
You are exaggerating the danger.
Maybe so, but better safe than sorry. IMO, there is no good reason to mix DCC and DC in a way that both power methods can somehow get connected. I call that "best practice".
The real problem is not which engine under which power. No o smoke would be released by the engine (unless a DC coreless motor engine sat on DCC powered track for extended time). The real danger is shorting those 2 power systems together (with or without the engine on them).
I’ve never used common rail wiring. I know it’s supposed to be easier, but I prefer duel rail wiring since it’s easier for me to keep the rules straight in my head on where to put the gaps.
The good reason, as alluded to by the OP, is to run DC locomotives that you wany to run but may not have the time, money, or skill to convert. In my experience it's really nice to have the option, and there aren't any serious downsides. Your mileage may vary. I disupte that there's any 'best practice' here that isn't soundly outweighed by rule #1.
I'm not against having a DC/DCC layout at all. Just feed the entire layout from a DPDT switch to which you connect the DC throttle and DCC booster. You can easily flip between the system with no possibilities of "crossed wires" or crossed blocks. And yes, that means entire layout would be single block.To be honest, using DC and DCC on a multi-block layout (where each block can be connected to some DC throttle or DCC booster) seems awkward to operate.
I think it's hard to argue that it's more awkward to operate than multi-cab control was when it was all DC cabs. It's true that being all DCC takes that away. On the other hand, with enough operators you need a dispatcher to control the blocks anyway.
Again, I see nothing here that outweighs rule number one. It just depends what you've got and how you want to run it.