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Bmws cheaper car is the 1 series, most minis cost the same as a 3 now a days, and are almost as big as one too!
I'm hoping to get out of the office by noon today, and, if my luck holds, I'll have an ESU 21-pin v5.0 in hand later today. Stay tuned.DFF
Unfair! You HO guys get all the new fun stuff first
In the US, it's the 2-series now. And the Mini isn't a Toyota Corolla by a long shot - including the price.
Oh, and the end result is that I spent about $210.00 for the locomotive and the redecoderization. It could have been worse, but I really like this first generation in NS paint on the fleet for interchange with the SBD and the A&R on my layout.
In hindsight, you could have saved $40 by buying the DC version of the loco.But, then you would have had to spend perhaps $10-20 for a speaker, so you really didn't lose all that much by getting the DCC+Sound equipped version even though you ended up replacing the decoder.
This confirms that ESU really goofed on the Essential Sound Unit decoder. Oh, and the end result is that I spent about $210.00 for the locomotive and the redecoderization. It could have been worse, but I really like this first generation in NS paint on the fleet for interchange with the SBD and the A&R on my layout.DFF
Interesting.The Flash memory is the same for both types of decoder: 32Mbit serial Flash memory. Just the package is different.The microcontrollers are different between standard V4 Micro decoder and the stripped one.V4 Micro uses https://www.microchip.com/wwwproducts/en/ATmega644PAAnd the stripped decoder uses https://www.microchip.com/wwwproducts/en/ATSAMD21G17Actually the stripped decoder's microcontroller has more internal program memory and more internal RAM. But each uses different type of a CPU architecture. Then there are also other differences between them. At a quick glance at the specs it seems that the stripped decoder's microcontroller is more feature-rich than the standard V4 Micro, but those features might not but useful for what is needed for a DCC sound decoder.Both microcontrollers also seem to still be in production. The price for the one used in V4 decoders is less than $4 and the price for the stripped down decoder microcontroller is less than $2.
Interesting that the "cheap" decoder is using an ARM processor (more powerful). If the V5 decoder also switched to ARM, you might go crazy and try reprogramming the economy decoder.-Dave
I tried reprogramming what the Essential Sound Fit decoder could do before I yanked it out of the GP9. Its options are very limited, even after the upgrade to its software with the LokProgrammer. It sucks.DFF