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Simple question, will the Lionel CW-80 run PS3 locomotives?  I know there is much hate for the transformers, but I have never had any issues with them, and in fact they give me less issues with my RTR Lionel, Lionel and K-Line TMCC, and MTH PS1 locomotives than my MTH Z-1000 transformer does.  I know you can't run PS2 locomotives with a CW-80, but I have not heard anything about PS3 and thus I am looking for simple yes/no answers, not debates over transformers or opinions over what's best.  Thanks.

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As GGG stated, you just have to try it to find out.

 

The mode of operation (DCS, DCC or conventional) shouldn't make much, if any, difference. Either the CW-80 will interfere or it won't.

 

Keep in mind that MTH hasn't placed the CW-80 on it's "approved for use with DCS" list, and that no one recommends that it be used with PS2 or PS3 engines.

There is no negative feelings towards PS2/3.  I'm not a flamethrower.  There were some nice locomotives in the new MTH catalog but any locomotive I buy has to run via a CW-80 since that's what I have, and I'd rather spend my money on the rolling stock, not the power brick.  I know that PS2 locomotives won't run with a CW-80, but I didn't know about PS3s.  I was hoping MTH had fixed that problem.  If they haven't then my statement wasn't to fan any flames, but to merely state a fact for me.

The problem is not with MTH engines, it is a problem of perception.

MTH controllers also chop the sine wave and the engines work fine with them.

There is something about the way the CW-80 does the chopping that upsets PS2 electronics.

 

Personally I expect you will change your tune when you run into the lack of power pulling a passenger consist.

A CW-80 is a rather small wattage unit.

I'm up to 200 watts on my layout and It's not done growing.

I know the CW-80 is on the weak side, but I do smallish carpet layouts and the only permanent layout currently in the house is on a 3.5x5 foot plywood board under my son's bed.  The CW-80 bolts to the board perfect.  I have run my PS1 Dreyfuss Hudson and 7 matching cars just fine as well with the CW-80.  I know full well it isn't the best overall, but it is the best for what I do currently.  Lionel's Legacy locomotives work fine with the CW-80, so it's something MTH is doing in their electronics that makes them not compatible.  I really want to add a Erie Triplex to my barn, but they never made a PS1 version, and Lionel isn't likely to ever make one.  So I'll have to wait until the day I can actually make a larger permanent layout and then I'll be using the GW-180.  That one will run PS2/3 locomotives, right?

I have a PS2 swticher that originally pitched a fit when I tried to run with a CW80 and then I read about the caboose trick. Either run with a lighted caboose or have one powered somewhere on the track. I tried it and it worked nicely. That said, it was only the one PS2 aaaannd, I run all my PS2's and 3's on a Z1000. I switch over to the CW80 to run my Williams engines, the one Lionel that I have and a non proto MTH switcher. These all run better at low speeds with the CW80 and without complaint. Personally I am a little suspicious of the whole chopped sine thing. Not sure what the benefit is but it seems -- from what I have read on this forum -- like all engines would rather run on pure sine. For value and reliability I strongly prefer the PS2's over anything else.  I have quite a few.

Originally Posted by Barry Broskowitz:

With all the locomotive "name dropping that you're doing, replacing a CW-80 with a $75 Z1000 is a drop in the financial bucket.

Not when I've gotten most of them off of ebay for between $150-200.  And it's usually one or two a year.  Like I said at top, I have a Z-1000, and my locomotives seem to run worse with it then they do the CW-80.  I've chosen the CW-80 as common factor for my locomotives because I've got 4 of them as they come with Lionel starter sets, the young kids I have around handle trains better with them, and they are an all in one package, so they work fantastic for mounting to small layouts.  I just don't want to buy a locomotive that'll be limited on where I can run it.  Thank you all for the information, I have learned what I needed to learn.

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