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I just picked up a Lionel #18596 D&H RS11, new in the box, from 2001. I opened it, replaced the batting with rope wick, enlarged the air inlet, cut the sock off the resistor and finally straightened the resistor so it goes into the bowl.

When I start the engine there is no smoke and I don't hear the fan motor. Approximately 30-45 seconds later I get a huge plume and then it smokes normally. I'm not expert with electronics but I do realize something in there has to trigger the fan motor. I would typically just replace the fan motor but in this case I'm not sure that's the issue. Thoughts?

RS11bRS11cRS11a

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3SXPMZaDMyM

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  • RS11b
  • RS11c
  • RS11a
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Well, there are only a handful of things that would cause that.  First off, try running the fan motor on 1.5V from a single battery when the motor is cold.  If it won't run on that, replace the motor.  If it does run on that, look at the three components on the PCB, the capacitor is the top suspect, followed by the 5V regulator and then the diode.  All of the parts aren't much more than a dollar, so simply replacing everything is not a bad idea if the motor is good.

The only other suspect would be the wiring and smoke switch.   A long shot is the triac on the R2LC, but if that works normally and turns the smoke on and off, that isn't that likely.

Last edited by gunrunnerjohn
gunrunnerjohn posted:

If you've verified no bad solder joints on the three fan power components, replace the smoke motor.

OK, checking the solder joints will be next.

I do hear the fan on start up, that's why I'm perplexed by the smoke delay. However, I will trust your expertise and replace if everything checks out.

If the fan is running, it could be the normal delay in heating stuff up.  Do you feel air coming out the stack right away?  If not, have you checked that the impeller is tight on the shaft?  Obviously, if the motor is running, all the components that power the fan are probably OK.  In that case, I'd be looking for poor connections to the smoke resistor, did you make sure those joints were secure?  All your photos were of the bottom of the PCB, what about the top?

Another point is to make SURE the resistor is not totally buried in the wick, it should be firmly in contact but have the top exposed.  Also, the airflow from the fan chamber should go over the resistor and out the stack, if you have material blocking the airflow, that will adversely affect performance.

This is really weird.  You rebuilt it and the stack or fan port is not overly blocked?  I would visually observe and watch the fan impeller spinning.  Sounds like it is working, but why building up smoke before it exits and operates normal is weird.  That usually is a blocked stack, even if just from a fluid add.  G

GGG posted:

This is really weird.  You rebuilt it and the stack or fan port is not overly blocked?  I would visually observe and watch the fan impeller spinning.  Sounds like it is working, but why building up smoke before it exits and operates normal is weird.  That usually is a blocked stack, even if just from a fluid add.  G

Hoping to pop the shell off today and take a peak. The fluid goes straight down into the unit. The slow start of the smoke is even after it has sat and I have not added fluid since the previous run. I'll definitely report back!

Jeff T posted:

Once again the proverbial "operator error" has proven to be the issue. I added smoke fluid, gave it a puff, sorry I can't say blow job, and everything is fine!

Have used the computer duster compressed air cans for a light bubble breaking shot across the top of just filled smoke units to start them. Works especially well on layouts where you can't easily reach the equipment for a top down "whoosh" of air. Glad to hear your issue is solved.

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