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I have just upgraded a premier PRR T1 duplex to PS2 and have encountered the following problem:

After start up mode and when I place the engine in reverse, the engine behaves as if there were no brakes.  In other words, I can push the engine (remote reads 0 smph) and the drive wheels turn.  When I increase the throttle, the headlight dims and then flickers as the smoke unit cycles on & off.  The drive wheels also move in a jerking motion (they are smooth when moving forward).

 

This does not occur if the smoke unit is turned off or if I move the engine in sleep mode (not perform start up).

 

The above only happens in reverse and all other features function properly.  I have checked for mechanical binding multiple times, changed tach readers, as well as used a different wire harness for the tender.  The only option that I have not tried is a different engine wire harness.

 

Any thoughts?

Thank you!

 

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Quite an interesting issue.  How does the engine react in conventional mode?  Inspect the engine wiring.  Motor leads, and smoke leads.  Any stray wire strands on the PCB?

 

When you say smoke cycles on and off, it should if the engine is moving.  Chuff and puff syncronized.

 

The head light dimming may be a drop in voltage on the PV circuit.  Same that feed motor and smoke element.  Of course a short is a short, and turning smoke off shouldn't be the issue, unless the smoke elements are the cause of the short.  Did you modify the smoke unit properly?   G

I tested the original diodes before I removed them as well as afterward.  The response on both was almost identical - .56 on one direction, infinity on the other.  However, one of the diodes read .53.  I also looked to see if the leads from either diode could touch the frame but saw no indication.  Despite this, I changed them anyway since they cost $1.50 and I was tired of fighting the problem.  I measured the new diodes after installation and they read .50. 

For good measure, I covered the exposed surfaces with electrical tape (following this, I assembled/disassembled the unit and looked for indentations in the tape - there were none).

 

Now the engine works perfectly.  I don't know if the diodes were in fact bad or if there was a short on one of the diode leads. I am assuming if there was a short then I would be experiencing bigger problems.

 

Scott,  actually those diodes are testing Sat with voltage drop one way and not the other.  if the diode was shorted or damaged you would have a voltage drop both ways, or no voltage drop for an open diode.

 

I imagine that the diode from the foward lead was touching chassis ground.  You had positive voltage at the motor terminal for reverse, and a completed path to ground probably through the diode.  This allowed the motor to have some current flow and that is why it could be pushed and roll.

 

Nicks in the motor leads that touch the chassis or stray wires at the terminal that touch the motor can, are common problems when an engine starts up and immediately starts to move.  A chassis ground on the motor side is more forgiving because of more robust FET controlling motor current and thicker board traces at the power supply.

 

When this grounding occurs on the lighting or coupler side, it usually results in thin board traces burning up or low current FETs being damaged.

 

I always examine where the engine PCB has to go and if there is clearance with the chassis frame, and also the shell when placed on top.  When in doubt I insulate with electrical tape on both sides, or move the diodes as mentioned.  G

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