Originally Posted by GGG:
Originally Posted by Matthew B.:
G, I'm not familar with the MTH system you mention I know about the Remote Commander which is a constant voltage IR device with limited DCS features. But what you mention seems to be a precursor to the DCS system.
I vaguely remember the Transformer with the telephone jack connection for the remote. I think you could install several extension jacks and walk around the layout connecting the remote at different points.
Is the Power master system with Cab1 that does not require a command base the same one you mentioned in an earlier thread that could operate up to 9 seperate loops?
MTH also made COnventtional engine with LocoSound so you needed to vary track voltage. In RTR sets, they included an adapter to the track with a small IR remote. Just the basics for raising and lowering track voltage, bell, whistle. They are around and cheap.
Yes to Lionel. Before the first command base was released you could get a Cab-1 and the Power Master. You could use your PW transformer with the fused adapter cord to power it. Later they released the Power House 135W brick and than 180W (current version) to power it.
Unique in that the CAB-1 talked directly to the PM. Giving you remote control of All your conventional trains, or conventional operation of your Command trains.
Throttle, direction, bell, whistle, momentum, boost and brake, and the RED Halt button to immediately kill power from the PM,
Using the TR button you can assign 1-9 IDs to the individual PMs. So Track 1, 2, 3...
10 amps each, remote control, and one of the better if not best circuit breaker if you use the Power House brick.
Later the ZW-C and now Legacy PM and ZW-L also can be talked to, but you must have the command base. That is why the PM is still a great item. Think temporary loop around a tree, or as you desire a conventional but large layout with remote control.
Later if you choose, you just add a command base and now you have both.
My layout is set up this way with 5 loops, a ZW-C and some individual PMs and the CAB-1. I run MTH PS-1 conventional, Lionel/K-Line Conventional (PW and Modern) and TMCC all at the same time. Controlling both conventional and Command simultaneously. When I want to sharpen my wits, I merge the conventional on to the same loop as the TMCC and control both via cab-1 focused on not letting a wreck occur. G
It can be a fun challenge to learn and master all the complexities of running so many control systems, etc., as you have. You made a very understandable and concise summary of the systems and how they can be made to work together, particularly the conventional on the same loop.
But for others, like me, that potential complexity, and the problems with ground planes, signal loss, etc., programming, that friends using DCS and/or Legacy "had fun" fixing, are what brought me fairly early on to put Legacy back in the closet and run only conventional. The only common control system that runs everything (well, okay, everything except Darsted and similar three-rail DC locos). I wanted to run trains, not diagnose and play with electronics and control systems: I do too much of that at work, although I fully understand how and why people who don't can find it exhilarating to work on the "toy technology" as well as the model trains as a hobby.
I am enthusiastic about LC+ because it is completely compatible with conventional operation, hassle free, and bulletproof. The learning curve, even for a four year old, lasts about three seconds. I have never had a problem with the hardware, the signal propagation, the "programming," in months of running three or more locos three hours a day, in company with conventional on the same loop, and it gives me the one and only advantage I saw to Legacy and DCS: precise control of speed independent of the adjusted speed of other locos running on the same or different loops.
It's a great system. I want all I can get.