What happened at your workbench today?

12 transmitters or one bound to 12 receivers?
If one can more than one loco be controlled at the same time?
One transmitter.
You can bind as many receivers as you like to a transmitter, but they would all respond if turned on.

The loco selection feature allows 12 (or more, see above) to be controlled.
If you want to 'consist' two or more loco's, you would bind them to the same transmitter and loco selection position. As with DCC, the performance of the loco's would need to be similar.

As an example:
You could set the loco bound to selection position '1' running around the garden. Change to another selection position, and that first loco continues running. You can then control the loco you have changed the selection too.

PhilP.
 
Over the last couple of weeks I have glued together, painted and filled the joins, painted again (in order to protect them from UV) some 3D printed tunnel mouths I purchased ready to install next year, along with a few other printed items that were purchased as well.

20251005_131703[1].jpg20251010_113059[1].jpg20251017_164941[1].jpg20251019_141903[1].jpg

...they all started of grey plastic, were primed grey, given an extra coat of grey primer, then painted grey or yellow, then laquered. So whilst the tunnel mouths look no different they have several coats of paint over the grey plastic.
The height extension pieces, which were an extra. Look as if they may well not be required, but maybe a small retaining wall of some sort.
 
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Over the last couple of weeks I have glued together, painted and filled the joins, painted again (in order to protect them form UV) some 3D printed tunnel mouths I purchased ready to install next year, along with a few other printed items that were purchased as well.

View attachment 348945View attachment 348946View attachment 348947View attachment 348948

...they all started of grey plastic, were primed grey, given an extra coat of grey primer, then painted grey or yellow, then laquered. So whilst the tunnel mouths look no different they have several coats of paint over the grey plastic.
The height extension pieces, which were an extra. Look as if they may well not be required, but maybe a small retaining wall of some sort.
What is that strange contraption on the right? It seems to keep a load of tools in a neat and orderly fashion :worried::worried: Whatever next ? o_O
 
Not so much what happened at my workbench as what happened with my workbench. A few years ago, I salvaged a load of timber from a drama set that was heading towards a skip, and today's wet weather meant I needed an indoor job, so I indulged in some woodworking, building a stand for the guillotine/folding machine that I acquired a couple of months ago.
I could have dowelled the joints, but I like  proper woodwork, so I cut stub tenons, drilled the mortices and cleaned them up with a chisel...
20251021_161327.jpg
20251021_163255.jpg
The frame was glued and clamped using webbing clamps...20251021_165027.jpg
...and yes, it went together square!
20251021_170403.jpg
Just the top to make now: a task for tomorrow...
 
One transmitter.
You can bind as many receivers as you like to a transmitter, but they would all respond if turned on.

The loco selection feature allows 12 (or more, see above) to be controlled.
If you want to 'consist' two or more loco's, you would bind them to the same transmitter and loco selection position. As with DCC, the performance of the loco's would need to be similar.

As an example:
You could set the loco bound to selection position '1' running around the garden. Change to another selection position, and that first loco continues running. You can then control the loco you have changed the selection too.

PhilP.
Is this a system for sale?
 
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