LGB-Sid
Registered

He did say DCC Phil, but I wonder if he is planning to run as Loco 0 without a Chip. That would probably be not too good.What do you intend to run it on? - Analogue, DCC, battery??
You may well find you only ever need 6-9V to make it run at a prototypical speed.. So 'track voltage' may not actually mean very much??
The blocks are not the same as LGB and have a maximum voltage of 14v. With that voltage, Playmobil recommended trains of no more than four items of rolling stock. You might get away with more with LGB stock as Playmobil stock have a hefty ballast weight usually.
Some useful notes and pics in an old thread here:
https://www.gscalecentral.net/threads/tcs-t1-decoder-in-playmobil-motor-block.52103/
about chipping a Playmobil block (this one is in the track maintenance vehicle, but the PM blocks are basically all the same) using a small inexpensive TCS decoder; personally I'd use something just a little bit more powerful like a Massoth L (or an old LGB 55021), but all the principles in the thread still apply.
I don't think you'll have any trouble at all running it on DCC once chipped, at least provided you're not going to have the poor little thing screaming round your track at full throttle.....
Jon.
I have not seen a DCC decoder that regulates the VOLTAGE from the rails. Every decoder I have ever seen rectifies track voltage and then presents it to some circuit to modulate that FULL track voltage with PWM.
Thus this motor with a decoder would be getting full 24v pulses. Sure you can use CV's to limit the max MODULATION percentage but not the voltage.
If there is a current production decoder that does regulate voltage I would like to be informed.
The bottom line is that run slowly, the higher voltage pulses should not damage the motor, but I would highly recommend severely limiting the top speed with CV5 and also to run it with it's intended load and then test/check the motor temperature.
Normal failures of overheating is melting the plastic that supports the windings, or overheating the insulation on the magnet wire that the motor is wound with, which causes shorts.
Greg
I think you will be fine, as long as you do not put Tornado's body on it, and run it at express speeds..
Why not pull the block, and jury-rig track and motor connections? - Run it for 5 minutes at a reasonably fast speed, and see if the motor gets hot.
Unless you will let it run for hours 'roundy-roundy' I reckon it will be fine.
My line is really an end to end so slow speedsis there nothing you can put between the pickup wires before they go to a decoder to limit the 24v down to 14v max , I'm not an electrician so might be a dumb question.
My line is really an end to end so slow speedsis there nothing you can put between the pickup wires before they go to a decoder to limit the 24v down to 14v max , I'm not an electrician so might be a dumb question.
There are variable adjustable voltage boards on ebay
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View attachment 232563 But it is polarity sensitive. It was a fellow Forumite that helped me when I wanted to install a 5v smoke unit.
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I'm not good with these things so I don't know it will suit your needs.
Mick, they give fixed DC voltage.. No good to drive a motor forwards / backwards at variable speed.