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Yet, there is lots of "helpful information" from the "experts" sprinkled all over the Internet.
We also don't know any details about your layout and its future DCC bus. Will it be a a simple straight bus, or will it have multiple branches? Where will it be fed by a DCC booster? While N scale locos require fraction of the amperage of larger scales, having many feeders to the track is IMO good idea.
John:Interesting, both of your go-to sources suggest twisting the bus wires. Perhaps that is somehow related to longer bus wire runs. Thoughts?Kind regards,Bill
These are my go to sourceshttps://wiringfordcc.com/https://sites.google.com/site/markgurries/
As mentioned, I twist. All of the "no problems" anecdotes don't trump my EE schooling. Pete is right, though - I have very long bus runs, 60-80 feet in a couple of cases, especially between the command station and peripheral boosters. Gotta do the twist. Short runs? Unlikely to see the difference, so carry on.But "snubbers"? That's got to be some manner of fake science propagated by wannabe electrical engineers. "Snubbers" are fine on sine-wave AC, but DCC is a square wave digital signal, and what snubbers do is round-off the waveform. I've seen the difference on an oscilloscope, and in my book the terminators/end-of-run filters soften the waveform and may add to signal loss. In high-noise environments ("noise" being crap on the DCC signal), "snubbers" may attenuate the noise enough to improve signal reliability, but in, say, a home layout setting it is my opinion they do more potential harm than good to signal fidelity.
Peteski;Pending the finishing of my basement, I only have the first module built, but I expect the basement construction will be finished in the next 30-45 days. I am modeling the B&O Toledo Division Second Sub in 1949 ish. Anyway, the current layout is a single level, generally single track with appropriate passing sidings, 154 feet mainline run, lots of operations work. 14 track staging yard, early transition with some steam and AB F7s. All with sound. So far I am wiring with a #12 stranded straight bus following the mainline, solid #22 drops at least every 2 feet, with all track having drops without exception. #14 wires in the detection areas to BDL168s. Signals are powered by SE8cs. Digitrax 240 command station, two boosters, and most of the districts protected by PM42s. Currently JMRI but I am studying CATS. All the mainline turnouts are powered by Tortoises, the rest by slide switches that are connected to the throwbars by piano wires and move the throwbars and power the frogs. Everything is ME code 40. All the turnouts and crossovers are hand laid.Hope this helps explain a bit better.Kind regards,Bill
@C855B @peteski Take a look at this .. start about minute 8
You're eventually going to make me dig out my o'scope (under 2" of dust, it's been so long since I've used it), but not this week due to travel and prep thereof.