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Hi Greg, I saw your web page with your P:87 work, that's what inspired me to try this out! Nice work! I do have some frogs for converting some ME #6 turnouts. This is a WIP for me, as I have to also make some guard rails (easy enough) and then figure out the best way to install the frogs and guard rails (less easy.... maybe epoxy? spikes? solder to PCB ties?). I did another video of a "flextrack test" to see how well the P:87 wheelsets track through a #6 turnout geometry:Not a valid vimeo URL(note, the centerbeam also has P:87 wheels)I am also converting the turnouts to Andy's throwbars, which seem to work OK (as long as you don't try to pick up the turnout! ). I did have to drill an extra set of holes in the throwbars, in order to reduce the oversized gap between open point and its adjacent stock rail. The other thing I want to do is solder a jumper wire on each point rail, for better electrical contact.EdPS: I'm really liking that Tsunami 645 sound!
The other fun part of this was the sound. Instead of relying on the tiny (and tinny) 1" speaker in the loco, I took a Tsunami sound decoder and hooked it up to a set of high-quality bookshelf speakers. The only additional parts I needed were an audio output transformer and a 1/8" audio plug from Radio Shack (as described on Lance Mindheim's April 20, 2012 blog. Then I consisted the two decoders together and muted the loco's onboard decoder. I also spent a little time tweaking the speed and momentum CVs in the loco's decoder to match the sound with the motion of the loco.
How exactly does the sound "get piped" into the speakers from the decoder? (the lancelot link above is dead)
Ed, do the Kadee code 88s have the correct wheel back contour now, or are they slab backs? Or, are you using another wheel?
Trying to visual the wires that go to the audio transformer ... they are certainly not coming from the decoder!
Hmmm, stationary decoder .... thanks, gotta research this more.