Asking a question hoping someone knows the answer... I'm just trying to understand.
Known infomation:
1. I have the MTH DDA40x and it's drawing like 1-2 A from an 18V track sometimes when going up a hill.
So from good old ohms law that means 18V(rms) / 2A (rms) = is about 9-10 ohms impedance at 60 Hz.
My question is as follows: Does the train present the same 10 ohm impedance to the DCS signals? (IE is that 10 ohms a real load and therefore the TIU digital output driver really drives a 10 ohm impedance?). Or is there some lowpass/highpass filtering going on inside the locomotive so that the impedance up across 1MHz - 5 MHz is much higher (like the typical RF 50 ohm impedance or something similar)?
Here is a quick drawing of what I'm asking:
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In my depiction.... Is scenario 1, or scenario 2 the true behavior of an MTH locomotive?
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Background info: The reason I ask is I want to start designing some matched pulse-shape filters for the DCS signal (just easy RLC ones) but I don't have a good feel for what the power handling needs to be. The DCS signal voltage is obvious, but there is a big design difference between putting a filter before a 50 ohm termination, or a 10 ohm one!!!
Thanks in advance!
Adrian J Tang