Zerogee
Clencher's Bogleman

Another little techie question, further to my thread in the SOUNDS section where I've been talking about the LGB sound tender that I recently acquired.
The sound tender, which is motorised, has a 55021 chip that will be (after removing and re-wiring the original installation) plugged straight into the sound board in the prescribed direct-decoder manner. The loco that I am using the tender with, will have its own separate decoder fitted.
My question is this: when an LGB unit retains its factory circuit board and has a decoder piggy-backed onto the main board, as intended, does the output from the AUXILIARY SOCKET (the two-pin lighting socket) feed straight track power (ie: unmodified DCC at full voltage), or does the decoder do anything to it before passing it out of the socket?
What I'm really asking is: IS IT SAFE TO CONNECT THE LOCO AND TENDER (each with their own decoder) TOGETHER VIA THEIR TWO-PIN SOCKETS, SO AS TO SHARE THE POWER PICKUPS? Or should I leave them completely unconnected and simply let each unit do its own thing?
Jon.
The sound tender, which is motorised, has a 55021 chip that will be (after removing and re-wiring the original installation) plugged straight into the sound board in the prescribed direct-decoder manner. The loco that I am using the tender with, will have its own separate decoder fitted.
My question is this: when an LGB unit retains its factory circuit board and has a decoder piggy-backed onto the main board, as intended, does the output from the AUXILIARY SOCKET (the two-pin lighting socket) feed straight track power (ie: unmodified DCC at full voltage), or does the decoder do anything to it before passing it out of the socket?
What I'm really asking is: IS IT SAFE TO CONNECT THE LOCO AND TENDER (each with their own decoder) TOGETHER VIA THEIR TWO-PIN SOCKETS, SO AS TO SHARE THE POWER PICKUPS? Or should I leave them completely unconnected and simply let each unit do its own thing?
Jon.