Originally Posted by gunrunnerjohn:
The TIU has no overload protection, other than the inadequate 20A fuse. My point is that I don't believe the 20A fuse is sufficient to protect the TIU alone.
Thousands of TIU's in service seem to disagree with you John. The number of TIU's that have failed due to overload since the fuses were added with Revision H1 is minuscule. Of those that have failed, I am aware of none, including the NJ Hi-Railer's units, that were not caused by exceeding the 10 amp power supply rating. Basically, you have to connect a power supply that will supply more than 10 amps continuously to kill one. If you want to say that someone who doesn't read the instructions can kill a TIU, that would certainly be true. Putting all 360 watts of a TPC 400 through a single TIU channel, as Jim alluded to, will cook it for sure. Of course, you could say the same thing about someone who burns up their electric shaver by plugging it into a 240 volt outlet when traveling in Europe. You can hardly fault MTH for such blatantly abusive behavior.
The TIU is a remarkably robust piece of hardware that will tolerate much abuse. Far more abuse, in fact, than many locomotive decoders, motors, lights, etc. The TIU does rely on external circuit protection as a first line of defense against a short circuit. If you follow the instructions with your TIU and connect a power supply with no more than 10 amps capacity you'll be in good shape. When a short circuit occurs the amperage draw will quickly exceed 20 amps. If the power supply's circuit protection should fail the fuses will blow before any damage is done to the TIU. All the TIU components will tolerate a 20 amp load for several seconds.
Would it be nice if MTH added 10 amp re-settable breakers to a future TIU revision? Sure. They've already used a six amp breaker on the DCS Commander. However, to say that the TIU has no circuit protection is simply inaccurate. You attempted to atribute such a claim to Barry.
According to Barry, the TIU doesn't have overload protection...
You have now attempted to attribute such a statement to me.
However, I remembered it incorrectly, it was actual Dave Hikel that made the statement.
You will note, John, that I did NOT say that the TIU has no circuit protection. I only said that it relies on the transformer's circuit protection to disconnect track power before the fuse blows. You are selectively ignoring my words....
The only way for the TIU to cut track power without blowing a fuse is if you press the E-Stop button. (emphasis added)
...in an attempted to defend an indefensible statement. I make plenty of errors here on the forum and in the rest of daily life. Mistakes happen. Please don't try to pass your errors my way, I make enough on my own.
BTW, to the OP, John's original advice was quite correct and the thread could easily have ended there. The 180 and 135 bricks can mixed (one brick per TIU channel) without trouble. The only issue is correct phasing. At least one production run of 135 watt bricks was wired out of phase at the factory with the 180 watt bricks. It is prudent to check the phasing on any layout with multiple power supplies, and it's particularly good advice when working with Lionel 135 watt bricks.