Question on LGB 10151 reversing loop kit.

blk69

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Hello. Concidering adding 2 reversing loops on a new outdoor layout, track powered. See LGB has a kit, one isolation section, a second isolation section you install some diodes in. Seams fairly straight forward to me. I am questioning what happons to an engine when it come to one of these sections with opposite polarity, some of the engine contacts are one one side of the isolator (say left rail is positive) and others on the other side (say right rail is positive). Wouldn't this cause a electrical short?

Only way I see thru this is if the engine can coast thru the isolator and then all contracts would be on rails of same polarity. What happons when engine is traving slow, how does it not sort out or just stop? What am I missing?
 
As this is analogue kit, you have to stop your train in the loop between the isolated breaks, then reverse the direction of your controller.

Make sure your loop is longer than your longest train, especially with metal wheeled rolling stock.

I had 3 of these in my analogue days, before I went to digital....
 
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the point is, that your fear never happens. because of the time factor.
when the locomotive passes the first isolation, there is no change of plus and minus.
while the locomotive is in between the two isolations it always got the same direction - thanks to the diodes.

while the locomotive is in between the two isolations, the direction must be changed * - but stays the same in the section.
because the direction has changed on the mainline, at passing the second isolation there is no change of direction.

*) by hand or automatic.
 
I don't recall having to change direction at the transformer, when I had track power and also had the reverse loop track sections installed.
 
I don't recall having to change direction at the transformer, when I had track power and also had the reverse loop track sections installed.
You don't..

Because (in effect) you are swapping track-polarity, and motor-polarity.

So track is reversed, but so is the motor..

Which ever direction you put the loco on the track, controller 'forwards' is always forwards.

PhilP.
 
I had an analogue reverse loop on my line in Hertford. I always went round the same way changing the switch when the train was in motion and remembering to change it back after the train passed the last isolator. You could of course do this the other way with the next train etc. Then back to what happened with the first train but Inreckon this could get confusing with 2 loops thus always going the same way round each loop would make life much easier. There is/was an LGB set to do the diodes thing available.

Of course DCC makes things much simpler, but at the cost of converting locomotives to DCC, DCC controller and Revers Loop modules.
 
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