0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Similar to what Nick is asking, what DCC command station are you using?I ask as I *just* had my 20 year old Zephyr (0G) die on me. One spot got hot to the touch and then I smelled burning electronics. Opened it up and it looked like a component in the power regulating side of things. A guess here, as I think Peteski would know what burned out if I post a picture.
Continuing on from the most recent ‘trouble’ event. As before, I disconnected the motor leads, “boosted” the motor with a shot of good ‘ol DC, reconnected the wires, and the loco again ran fine on DCC. I put it on LokProgrammer and reinstated BEMF. Knowing full well that this, of course, is in no way a fix, I just tried something else.The problematic chassis is from an Atlas GP38. I also have an Atlas GP40 - it’s virtually the identical chassis, which I bought new, and installed the same ESU 58751 decoder just 3 months ago, and which has never experienced any problems. So, I just swapped decoders between the two.The suspect, older chassis with the newer decoder immediately ran problem-free.The newer chassis with the suspect, older decoder immediately emitted a high frequency oscillating sound as soon as the wheels touched the DCC trackage. I captured this in the attached short, hastily-shot video clip: />This is an entirely new phenomenon, which never once occurred in all the time that the older decoder was in the older chassis. I don’t have the faintest clue what this could be, but it doesn’t sound good, and it probably doesn’t bode well! It was hard to tell where the sound was coming from - I’m tempted to say the speaker, but I’m not sure. The throttle was at speed step 0, and I had not yet entered the loco address.So, beats me … why this would show up just because the decoder was moved to a different chassis is puzzling. Before putting the loco on the tracks, I ensured that there was no continuity between the frame halves, and that the motor leads were also isolated.There was a question about NCE PowerCab track voltage … fwiw, it was just over 16V AC.
Both locos ran on their respective test loops, without incident, for a good 90 minutes straight yesterday (May 15). This morning, I turned them around so they could accumulate some time, running forwards, in the opposite direction (just because!).The loco with the suspect decoder immediately emitted that high pitched buzzing sound as the NCE was trying to boot up. I say “trying”, because it twice shut down and rebooted as per short circuit detection. As it was rebooting the 3rd time, I flicked the motor and all was good. Both locos are again doing test oval loops. I’m going to order a new 58751 board.