Many thanks to everyone that replied and gave advice and instruction.
Here is what I've done. I cut the original (20ga?) wire that connects the power supply to the track power clip and put electrical connectors on the ends I cut. I purchased a simple power distribution block from Radio Shack (allows for 4 additional power feeds from the single power input) and screwed it down, out of sight and close to my power supply. I then connected the input power wire (the PS side of the wire I cut earlier) from the power supply to the power distribution block and ran the first power feed (using the track side of the wire I cut earlier) to the original track power clip. I then ran an additional power feed (16ga wire) from the power distribution block to second track power clip halfway around my track run (being careful to test polarity). And Viola, I'm back in business!
Hope my description wasn't to confusing, but in short, it was clean and easy to accomplish. I didn't change the power supply. And using the power distribution block, some electrical connectors and the additional track power clip made the job possible without having to soldier anything. I used wire clips from Lowes to neatly trace the second power feed wires around the track where it won't interfer with the train's operation and it can't been seen. The single additional power feed seems to be all that was required with my run and the train is working smoothly.
Again, thanks to everyone for the help!
Texas
Here is what I've done. I cut the original (20ga?) wire that connects the power supply to the track power clip and put electrical connectors on the ends I cut. I purchased a simple power distribution block from Radio Shack (allows for 4 additional power feeds from the single power input) and screwed it down, out of sight and close to my power supply. I then connected the input power wire (the PS side of the wire I cut earlier) from the power supply to the power distribution block and ran the first power feed (using the track side of the wire I cut earlier) to the original track power clip. I then ran an additional power feed (16ga wire) from the power distribution block to second track power clip halfway around my track run (being careful to test polarity). And Viola, I'm back in business!
Hope my description wasn't to confusing, but in short, it was clean and easy to accomplish. I didn't change the power supply. And using the power distribution block, some electrical connectors and the additional track power clip made the job possible without having to soldier anything. I used wire clips from Lowes to neatly trace the second power feed wires around the track where it won't interfer with the train's operation and it can't been seen. The single additional power feed seems to be all that was required with my run and the train is working smoothly.
Again, thanks to everyone for the help!
Texas