Greg Elmassian
Guest
Can you detail "dropped off", is this a range problem? Was it a pretty clear limit? We don't have a lot of feedback on it.
My Stainz's conversion is in the loco:I found the Piko system unreliable. The signal would drop off……
I have two battery Stainz. All the gubbins is in the loco.
I don’t like a trailing wagon. The loco has to be able to run light in my railway world.
Here’s one of them. (The 24 volt smoke unit gets power off the track still)
View attachment 311588
Hm interesting I have had no problems at all with mine in a Railcar and 2 others that I have converted for friends work just fine as well. What battery voltage were you feeding the Piko unit?I found the Piko system unreliable. The signal would drop off……
I have two battery Stainz. All the gubbins is in the loco.
I don’t like a trailing wagon. The loco has to be able to run light in my railway world.
Here’s one of them. (The 24 volt smoke unit gets power off the track still)
View attachment 311588
Hm interesting I have had no problems at all with mine in a Railcar and 2 others that I have converted for friends work just fine as well. What battery voltage were you feeding the Piko unit?
Are you using them both at the same time?The same voltage as the shunted operates at - that also loses signal in the same manner and it is as it left the factory…..
The Piko unit recommends 7-24v DC, mine is at 12v DC which is plenty when you have no track power losses to worry about.The same voltage as the shunted operates at - that also loses signal in the same manner and it is as it left the factory…..
I have tried all options Phil.Are you using them both at the same time?
Have you changed one unit to different channel?
If both units are behaving in the same way, it could be interference, or a local obstruction/reflection, causing your problem..
Have you tried moving 4-6 feet sideways, and seeing if you have control then?
PhilP
Hello PhilPHi Sarah,
Does your Stainz have the rectangular socket on the back?
If so, this change is quite easy..
At Crewe at the moment, so more this evening.
Ps> It does not matter if DC or DCC.
PhilP
Well done. How have you managed to squeeze the batteries in? I was thinking to do the same but with DCC or a sound card from my loco soundI found the Piko system unreliable. The signal would drop off……
I have two battery Stainz. All the gubbins is in the loco.
I don’t like a trailing wagon. The loco has to be able to run light in my railway world.
Here’s one of them. (The 24 volt smoke unit gets power off the track still)
View attachment 311588
In my case, I put a pack of three 14500 (AA sized) li-ion cells on the floor off the cab, shrouded in black tape and they are hardly noticeable.Well done. How have you managed to squeeze the batteries in? I was thinking to do the same but with DCC or a sound card from my loco sound
That would require a 6S lithium pack (6 x 3.7v = 22.2v)Thanks for the fast reply. Yes ideally would be great if I could place the batteries in the boiler where the weight is. That would give me space for the DCC controller. However I need to feed that one with 21V …
Or keep to a 3S pack, and fit a boost-converter..That would require a 6S lithium pack (6 x 3.7v = 22.2v)
Rik
Thank you. I guess that’s impossible to hide…That would require a 6S lithium pack (6 x 3.7v = 22.2v)
Rik
If you forget DCC, you can run from as little as 9.6V (8x NiMH cells) but a 3S Lithium pack (11.1V)is probably 'better'.Thank you. I guess that’s impossible to hide…
Something to think about. As long as I can use a smoke generator and a Fosworks sound generatorIf you forget DCC, you can run from as little as 9.6V (8x NiMH cells) but a 3S Lithium pack (11.1V)is probably 'better'.
The prototype would never have performed like an express, and it is the voltage that gives you the top speed.
PhilP.