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I recently purchased a #11108 C&O George Washington Pacific.  I am having a problem.  It will suddenly slow down or stop and sometimes I have to shut off power and restart.  I am using Legacy.  Do I have a R2lc board going bad, something else.  It happens with the cruise on or off. I have done a reset.  Any ideas?

 

Thanks  Doug

Last edited by Doug N
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This may be a silly question, but have you checked that you haven't accidentally knocked the train-brake slider on your cab-2 to fully-on?  This bites all of us at times and can cause a lot of head-scratching. If this problem only happens to this loco, and other Legacy locomotives are unaffected, then my suggestion probably does not apply.

Hi Doug,

This also might sound silly, but I assume this is a used engine. If this is the case check a few things, first make sure you clean all the pick up rollers and drive wheels,

check for heavy grime build up on the drivers with the tires. This grime can hit the brake shoes and cause a problem. Check that all pick up rollers are tight.Also I had this problem with a Hudson, It would stop in the same area all the time, I needed another power drop. Also check all your ground wires.

 Sorry for the fast typing I have to run out in a few minutes

Alex

Last edited by Alex M

Thanks all for your replys.

 

I just ran it again for about 10 minutes, no problems.  It seems to be intermittent.  I believe that at one time the headlight did blink when it happened, but I'll continur to check that.  I did notice that one of the handrails was touching another piece of piping at the front of the engine. I gently bent it away wondering if that was affecting the signal.  I'll keep running it and if it happenes again I'll put my hand above the engine.  It does not happen to any other engines and it was happening at various locations on the layout.

 

Doug

You may have found the problem on your own. Depending on the engine some use the handrail for the antenna and if it touches something that is grounded it will short out the signal. If it is barely touching a little bump now and then could cause an intermittent loss of signal. A flashing headlight is a clue that the signal is weak.

Ron

If that handrail is part of the main handrail  thats connected to the antanna thats a likely culprit, a blinking light on a TMCC or Legacy loco indicates a signal loss. The antenna/handrail is insulated from the  boiler by insulator rings if any part of the handrail/antenna touches the boiler it can interfere with the signal.

I have found another spot where the hand rail might have been touching the cab.  I adjusted that opened up the engine and again checked the connections.  I also tightened the wire nut connecting the hand rail wires.  While I had it open I modified the smoke unit, what a difference that makes.  I ran it and so far no problems.  One thing that I noticed was before the headlight had a slight flicker, now it doesn't.

 

Doug

This may be another of my off-the-wall ideas, but does this happen in specific places only? You said earlier that it happens at various points around your layout, but are they always the same ones?  If so, and if these are near large metal surfaces (On bridges, in some tunnels, running under other tracks, passing any other large metal surface, etc.) then it could be a signal issue if this locomotive is a bit weak in the reception department. Sometimes holding your hand over the locomotive (As was suggested earlier by RickO.) or running an earth-grounded wire to the applicable object, or alongside the track can sometimes solve these problems. As you seem to have improved matters by your attention to the locomotive's antenna, this does seem to point towards a signal issue.

Still having a problem with this.  It also happens when it is running alone with no consist.  Something new happened yesterday. It run 1 loop and when I stopped it and tried to reverse it it would not run in reverse, then it would not run in forward.  After I shut it down and turned off the power and waited a few minutes it ran but if I stopped it it would repeat the process of not running.  Any ideas?

 

thanks

 

doug

If you have the parts, or can borrow one from another locomotive, try swapping the R2LC from another engine.  Note that you'll have to do a full reset of it when you do the swap.  You can also test the R2LC in the other locomotive and see if the problem moves with the part.  Next would be the DCDR I would guess.  Those two parts, and the associated wiring, are about all that is in the picture for what you're seeing.  Of course, check the antenna connection as well.

 

One question, is the headlight blinking at any time?

Originally Posted by gunrunnerjohn:

If you have the parts, or can borrow one from another locomotive, try swapping the R2LC from another engine.  Note that you'll have to do a full reset of it when you do the swap.  You can also test the R2LC in the other locomotive and see if the problem moves with the part.  Next would be the DCDR I would guess.  Those two parts, and the associated wiring, are about all that is in the picture for what you're seeing.  Of course, check the antenna connection as well.

 

One question, is the headlight blinking at any time?

Yes there is a slight flicker occasionally.

 

Doug

Mr Muffin, I drilled out the hole for the air intake on the smoke unit.  I don't remember what size bit I used, but not large enough to touch any burried wires. 

 

I believe that Mike has a video on the Lionel web site explaining this.  It makes a big difference. I have done this to most of my non-Legacy steamers.  Alex M has done some also.

 

doug

I've drilled a few of my TMCC smoke units, none of them have complained.

 

Doug, did you try swapping the R2LC to see if you could narrow down where the issue is?  How about checking the antenna closely, and making sure it's not shorted to the shell?

 

Dumb question:  Have you removed the shell, connected a 12" wire to the antenna connection, and run it around that way?  I'd be curious if it ever has a problem without the shell (and of course any antenna issues as a result).

In general, but look at the firmware version on the board.  For instance, here's one of the later ones, the C13 firmware.  Many are the C08 firmware, that's what I find in most of my TMCC stuff.  However, if you have a C08 in this locomotive and a newer board, say a C11 or C13, it'll work well enough to test this issue.  There is no damage danger in mixing them, at least I've never seen or heard of any.  I know the C11 had a compatibility issue with the ERR Cruise Commander, but no damage results, just didn't work right.  I've used the C08 in a lot of places in place of the earlier versions and everything worked just fine.

 

 

John it has C13 in it.  I had a C08 and put it in and nothing happened, would not move.  I don't know if the old C08 is bad or not.  Also before I tried swaping the boards the engine would not go into reverse at all, just forward.  Would that indicate a motor board problem, or still possibly a R2LC problem?

 

Doug

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