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... or do they just "lose their mind" and will work again after factory reset and reprogramming? ...
This. Usual sloppy operating conditions with our N-Trak layout at a show yesterday. By the end of the day we had to reset and reprogram close to a dozen units after one mishap or another.
A short condition could definitely damage a decoder.........Think about it. ...
Interested to know why on some layouts and not others. Perhaps lack of additional power management protection... brand of DCS... or other? I use a full mix of decoder brands and do not see this at all.
I do and did, and I disagree. If this was the case, then MRR'ers everywhere would be howling about fried decoders and the decoder manufacturers would quickly be out of business doing warranty replacements.Shorts across the rails are SOP on even the best run and maintained model railroad. To assert "...definitely damage..." flies in the face of the empirical evidence otherwise. Moderate that to "...may damage..." and then we can talk about proving the theory behind adding zeners or other voltage limiters, which also presumes that fast-response voltage limiting is not already designed into decoders, control stations or boosters, which it is.> ...when the short is removed, there is likely to be a voltage spike because the electronics are still trying to supply the correct voltage, but the voltage overshoots what is correct. ...Sounds good on the surface, but I'd like to see before/after oscilloscope traces backing this up.Given the outright careless operation by the clueless on our club layout, I have seen no "fried" decoders, just scrambled ones put back into operation after a quick reset. These are fully attributable to momentary shorts screwing up the data signals which in turn trigger non-robust firmware into unanticipated states. BSOD, decoder style.
A short condition could definitely damage a decoder......
The problem with certainty is that the electronics in question may be damaged and another time, the same hw and overvoltage pulse doesn't damage it.....I have experience where decoders were scrambled by an overvoltage pulse (I assume, because it fit into the short causing a problem bucket) but as stated, the decoders aren't rediculously fragile, so observations far from a lab with test equipment are just educated guesses.I can tell you that since I installed my zener diode protection on the club layout, we haven't seen any failures.....granted, that's not definite proof, but it's all I'm going to be able to add to the discussion.So, yes, I've definitely seen a decoder killed when a short circuit condition was involved, and YES, it doesn't happen all the time.