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Although these sine wave pulses don't look anything like a DCC command, who's to say that they still cannot damage a decoder?
How would that happen?
And here's the 1300 schematic everyone's been waiting for.I did this in a circuit simulator, so I could also "run" it and confirm that I had the schematic right. Indeed, I get thesame pulse pattern that the real thing does. The absolute peak in the simulator is not up to 25. It is at about 23.5.But that can easily be caused by the transformer or the Darlington not being simulated exactly the same as physical ones that are in the unit. The transformer is modeled as 27v peak to peak, which is about what the MRC pack does.Note: The 4 diodes ARE in fact wired up as a full-wave bridge. The funky half-pulses are created by that 10k resistor that they tapped off the AC input from the transformer.
My main beef about all this is that letting high amplitude pulses go out to the rails smacks of being "cheap". It's not that hard to keep those under control.
So once Max does the repositioning of the resistor that Point353 suggested, and if that works, can someone take some pictures of how to do this? I would like to open up my 1300 (in Athearn clothing) and modify it such. Or at least draw the corrected schematic. (Before and After)
I would be willing to do this to the 1300 I've been experimenting on. But be warned. No matter how similar that Athearn pack appears and even if the circuits are in fact identical, it might not look all that similar when you open it, at least not so similar that you could just follow instructions like "snip this here and solder this there".
How much more expensive would the 1300 need to be to eliminate the "high amplitude pulses"?Possibly not much, if at all. Suppose that you remove R1 from its present position (connected between one side of the AC input to the bridge rectifier and the base of Q1) and, instead, connect it between the junction of the +ve output of the bridge rectifier and the collector of Q1 and then (in series with) the top end terminal of the potentiometer speed control R2. Would you be willing to rerun your simulation for this modified circuit configuration?
Now that I'm reading this, I realize I don't understand what you want to try.You mean:1) from V+ out of the rectified, to R1, then to the collector of Q1 ?2) what do you mean "and then inseries with" ?However I try to interpret this, it seems like either R1 is completely bypassed, or else it is in series with the + to the collector, in which case we are going to get almost no output from Q1.Can you restate this, maybe another way?
That is a nice circuit simulator Max!I also don't quite understand what he means. The AC signal fed through the 10K resistor to the transistor's base is not creating high voltage pulses. It actually produces the alternating lower amplitude pulses. It could even be totally elimianted and then all the pulses will be the same size while the maximum voltage would still be just as high as the rectifier output (minus voltage dropped inside the transistor). I think he has it backwards.As I mentioned, the easiest and cheapest way MRC could have modified 1300 to produce lower voltage out of that throttle would be to use a transformer with a lover output voltage. No additional components or circuit modifications needed - just one component (transformer) replaced with a different one.