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Now, regarding the decoder. Again, just for something to do, I alligator-clipped the standalone decoder between a spare standalone motor and the LokProgrammer. Lights, sound & motor were working.
I have another question - if you alligator-clip jumpers from your multimeter to the motor outputs on a decoder, will you see varying voltages on the DC scale as you increase & decrease speed steps on the dcc throttle? In other words, can you substitute your multimeter in place of a test motor?
It’s been two months since I posted anything to this topic, so, apologies to those who may have been following along.Long story short, and to tie up loose ends, I ended up installing both a new Kato motor, and a new 58741 decoder, within that Kato ES44AC chassis. Successfully loaded an appropriate ESU sound project, and resumed normal functioning (on its own, and in consist mode) without incident.By my reckoning, the purchase/repair/maintenance cost for this one locomotive breaks down as follows (Cdn $, taxes + shipping etc where appropriate):- original purchase cost (Kato Kobo factory dcc/sound) - $480- ESU 58741 decoder (to replace crappy Kobo ‘Select’ decoder) - $150- replacement Kato motor - $50- 2nd replacement 58741 decoder - $150- estimated Total - $830And now, here’s the icing on this slice of cake … I’ve got an Atlas GP38 with an ESU 58751 drop-in board, one year since the install, exhibiting the very same symptoms:- motor function dies while in consist, but sound & lights work- finger-flick the motor and it sporadically, erratically dithers, irrespective of speed step setting- motor & drivetrain operate fine on DC power- decoder operates a stand-alone test motor on DCC- put everything back together, and the Atlas loco again runs & sounds fine on DCCAt least, until the next time. I have gone through the above procedure four times within the last 10 weeks or so. I’ve posted the puzzle on the ESU groups.io forum, and Peteski is once again in the loop. I’ll report back if/when anything verifiable arises. Oft times I wonder why I put up with the cost and frustrations of this hobby!