Sorry to resurrect a year-old thread but I made an interesting observation tonight while upgrading a PS2-3v engine with a a BCR. I decided to tap my meter into the now useless charge port and monitor the voltage increase as I applied power to the track and as this was on a DCS test track, the engine remained dark & silent.
The BCR charged very slowly, and after 2 minutes the new BCR only went from .7 to 1.1 volts. Nowhere near enough power to maintain a shutdown sequence. Next, I hit the startup button, and the floodgates opened. Within seconds it went from 1.1 volts to 1.8 and after about 30 seconds it was at 3.4 volts.
I tested this on a couple of other engines and the result was the same. An engine that I hadn't run in a while had a depleted BCR with an initial voltage of 1.5 volts and at 3 minutes of full track power with the engine off, it was only up to 1.9 volts, at 9 minutes I finally reached 2.5 volts. Once I hit the start-up button, the BCR voltage increased significantly faster. After pressing the shutdown button the BCR voltage continued to climb rapidly to 4.8 volts and slowed as reached 4.9 volts which is normal behavior. The operating voltage of the BCR topped out at 5.055 volts after 15 minutes.
What I surmised from this is that placing your PS2-3v engine on an energized track (with DCS signal) while leaving it off (dark & silent) will result in very slow charging. You should at least start and shut down the engine to initiate the charging of a battery or BCR.
Not sure if the PS2-5v boards behave the same way, I didn't test those.