John, I understand what you are saying, and I understand the use of TVS.
I also understand the human factors of folks willing to buy something that is presented as a solution to expensive train repairs.
What I questioned was placement and durability. Presenting issue with engines and TIU that have TVS.
We have taken this TVS item, built into and used to protect specific equipment or more accurately specific chips on equipment in industries were equipment failure can't be tolerated.
Lots of engineering and also lots of trial and error.
So I just question what are we protecting inside the engine? What component on the PS-2 board?
How can a TIU that has TVS continue to have failures. Do the TVS fail? I know they short, I replaced enough of them.
So let me present some more facts.
What does your ASC notes tell you to replace if you have a DCS signal loss on a TIU? U502 right. When is the last time you had a bad U502 on a Rev I or newer TIU? I have not had one, in fact it is a whole different series of chips that fail. So much so that MTH went back and added SMD TVS to protect those 4 chips in the TIU. One per channel.
What TVS did you have as a replacement for TVS in TIU in the repair kit? They are 33s. Guess what TVS is in the Rev I and L? 39s. Did this shift in a TVS cause this change in TIU damage?
I brought this up to MTH this week as a matter of fact conversation. This was after I had to work on some older REV H TIU that had 33s. That was when the tech said, he wonder if that caused the shift in failure type. I did not put 2 and 2 toegether on the mismatch of repair kit TVS rating, versus what I was seeing in newer TIU until I saw the older TIU. He is going to bring it up to the engineer to see what he thinks.
So coming full circle, having seen one engine still have a PS-2 audio amp failure on a derailment with a TVS installed, with TVS protection on the TIU output. What does it do? Have we picked the right size, can it cause other issues? Should they be changed out periodically?
When you look at what QSI was doing, they were trying to protect capacitors and diodes that were made in the late 80s 90s with 35V ratings. We already know they had underrated components until later runs in the 90s.
PS-2 5V had several components operating near the max rating according to an engineer I talked too. Probably the reason for so many revisions to that board in a short 4 year life span.
So my only thoughts on this were not to place them in the engine. Too much risk for unknown benefit. Looks at easier access placement on your layout, and consider periodic replacement. G