Hunt,
I keep all of my locomotives that are not currently being used on the layout on trackage that has the power disconnected to eliminate cooking off my engine decoders while they sit idle. So when I had the problem with loosing the control of the switches when the defective locomotive was on the track it was in essence by itself. After the loss of turnout control for the first time I could not regain control by using the stop button, because of course, when the stop button is pressed no signal is transmitted from the Command Station. Even after I reset the stop button to on I had no controll of the switches as long as the faulty engine was in the command station's roster whether or not it was on the track. The only way I could gain control of the switches was to remove the faulty locomotive from the roster and that would allow my switches to operate. So let me go into a little remedial detail here for you. On the new command station that Bachmann sent to me the turnouts on my layout worked until I programed in the faulty decoder in the fifth locomotive. As soon as I turned on the locomotive to run on my system none of the switches would work until I uninstalled it from the command station. When I uninstalled it the turnouts worked correctly. Then when I rehooked up my old command station, which I thought had been defective, and just removed the offending locomotive from the roster everything worked normal again on that command station. So....apparently the decoder in that locomotive is somehow corrupting the data base in the command station. And yes you are certainly correct, in that I have no intention of reintroducing the fouling son-of-a-gun locomotive to my system ever again. Not because of the time involved in further testing but because of the chance that it will screw up the system which I now have up and running. In fact I intend to decommission that locomotive and use some of the parts of it elsewhere. I would be interested in hearing from you whether or not any of this shared information was beneficial to you. Thanks, John the sailor P.S. I know a Howard Hunt. Are you him?
I keep all of my locomotives that are not currently being used on the layout on trackage that has the power disconnected to eliminate cooking off my engine decoders while they sit idle. So when I had the problem with loosing the control of the switches when the defective locomotive was on the track it was in essence by itself. After the loss of turnout control for the first time I could not regain control by using the stop button, because of course, when the stop button is pressed no signal is transmitted from the Command Station. Even after I reset the stop button to on I had no controll of the switches as long as the faulty engine was in the command station's roster whether or not it was on the track. The only way I could gain control of the switches was to remove the faulty locomotive from the roster and that would allow my switches to operate. So let me go into a little remedial detail here for you. On the new command station that Bachmann sent to me the turnouts on my layout worked until I programed in the faulty decoder in the fifth locomotive. As soon as I turned on the locomotive to run on my system none of the switches would work until I uninstalled it from the command station. When I uninstalled it the turnouts worked correctly. Then when I rehooked up my old command station, which I thought had been defective, and just removed the offending locomotive from the roster everything worked normal again on that command station. So....apparently the decoder in that locomotive is somehow corrupting the data base in the command station. And yes you are certainly correct, in that I have no intention of reintroducing the fouling son-of-a-gun locomotive to my system ever again. Not because of the time involved in further testing but because of the chance that it will screw up the system which I now have up and running. In fact I intend to decommission that locomotive and use some of the parts of it elsewhere. I would be interested in hearing from you whether or not any of this shared information was beneficial to you. Thanks, John the sailor P.S. I know a Howard Hunt. Are you him?