Hmm...a little more trial and error, and I have to amend my inclinations...
I don't think it's the transformer, but now the controller itself. Rather than change the wall outlet the transformer was plugged in at, I tried unplugging the transformer from the controller. Waited a few seconds and plugged it back in, and Thomas would run. The same wasn't the case when I unplugged the line to the track, so I'm led to believe the controller is at fault.
Curious thing, if I have it set to 100, plug it in, Thomas goes and keeps on going, indefinitely as far as I've been able to tell. Only when I turn it down, even as little as to 95 or 90, he'll come to a stop. If I immediately go from 100 to 0, he keeps moving, too...not just for decceleration, but even after that there's a small crawl. Yet, no other lower setting will work -- turn it up to 20 and he's back stopped.
I ran the train at 100 for a few minutes -- the engine didn't get hot, but the controller did. That's probably where I'm going to look next.
I don't think it's the transformer, but now the controller itself. Rather than change the wall outlet the transformer was plugged in at, I tried unplugging the transformer from the controller. Waited a few seconds and plugged it back in, and Thomas would run. The same wasn't the case when I unplugged the line to the track, so I'm led to believe the controller is at fault.
Curious thing, if I have it set to 100, plug it in, Thomas goes and keeps on going, indefinitely as far as I've been able to tell. Only when I turn it down, even as little as to 95 or 90, he'll come to a stop. If I immediately go from 100 to 0, he keeps moving, too...not just for decceleration, but even after that there's a small crawl. Yet, no other lower setting will work -- turn it up to 20 and he's back stopped.
I ran the train at 100 for a few minutes -- the engine didn't get hot, but the controller did. That's probably where I'm going to look next.