Hi There! Thanks for sharing that link, I saw that too when they posted it last week. Sadly that wiki/document doesn't include quite a bit of information I need such as which wires control the front markers, which control the rear markers, which the engine room lights, which the strobes etc.
The more I dig into it the more I am feeling like I will rip the guts out and put a different decoder into it. I do love the sounds of the TCS decoder so my plan is to wire up a temporary external sound jack to the decoder so I can connect it to the microphone in input on my computer and then re-record each individual sound one at a time so they are saved on my computer as sound files and then I can build a new sound project for the ESU Loksound using those recording files.
I am not sure how well it will work but I'm gonna give it a try. The first step is to temporarily reprogram the loco so it makes no sounds at all until I press F4 (or any F key) and then play the one and only sound I am interested in. Then reprogram F4 to the next sound, play & record it to the computer, and so on until I get all the ones I need. It's definitely gonna be a long process but I'm excited to give it a try.
The TCS decoders are highly engineered and impressive pieces of technology and they sound fantastic, its just that the configuration options are too limited for my preference as I like to micro-manage/detail program every aspect of my decoders.
The more I dig into it the more I am feeling like I will rip the guts out and put a different decoder into it. I do love the sounds of the TCS decoder so my plan is to wire up a temporary external sound jack to the decoder so I can connect it to the microphone in input on my computer and then re-record each individual sound one at a time so they are saved on my computer as sound files and then I can build a new sound project for the ESU Loksound using those recording files.
I am not sure how well it will work but I'm gonna give it a try. The first step is to temporarily reprogram the loco so it makes no sounds at all until I press F4 (or any F key) and then play the one and only sound I am interested in. Then reprogram F4 to the next sound, play & record it to the computer, and so on until I get all the ones I need. It's definitely gonna be a long process but I'm excited to give it a try.
The TCS decoders are highly engineered and impressive pieces of technology and they sound fantastic, its just that the configuration options are too limited for my preference as I like to micro-manage/detail program every aspect of my decoders.