Quick, easy and fun...
Assuming you don't have the issue in the other thread with the bad TVS diodes and stuff, and your TIU is working normally, there are still some situations where the excursion voltage still isn't enough for everything out there. DCS is super-imposed on AC power with a tricky transformer at the TIU output, so it's not as easy to build a booster like GRJ's legacy one. I spent a lot of time on this before I finally came up with this super simple solution.
Inside the output stage of the TIU on each channel it uses an ACT244 octal driver and gangs all of the 8 channels together. Simply soldering another ACT244 or two directly on top of the ones already in the TIU literally doubles or triples your drive strength since you're combining 16 or 24 channels now (the footprints/pinouts line up when stacked of course). 33 cents on digikey and a few drops of solder paste is all you need. You can put them on the engines too for the PS2/3 board DCS transmitter. It's the same ACT244 part.
Here's the DCS waveform (TIU out, Train in) on the track with 4 engines before and after stacking 2 more drivers on the channel:
We should collectively lobby GRJ to make a little board that goes over the existing driver and has stacks of 2, 4 or 8 chips. It's so very effective at squaring up the rise and fall times as well as maintaining the DCS voltage excursion.
So so simple, can't believe I didn't do this one a year ago.