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The low speed control variation in PS2/3 diesels was discussed at length in another post. Some do better than others in the 3-5 smph range and I understand this is normal. All of my PS2/3 steam engines have great speed control down to 3 smph as do two of my diesels. Then I have two diesels that are ok but better at 6-7 smph. Then two more that are just are ok at 6-7 but very unsteady below that.

 

Is there something that can be done to improve this? The engines in question don't seem to suffer from any obvious mechanical issues like binding in the trucks. I'm running DCS on Atlas 3R with 036 curves if that helps.

 

Thanks

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I don't know if smaller radius curves have an impact or not, maybe 036 is too small or puts more friction on the wheels than say 054 or 072 curves.

 

I would check the gearing to make sure there's no debris causing the problem.  I have an Atlas GP9 (with PS2 installed) and shortly after putting down ballast I had the engine come to a dead stop, found a very small piece of ballast had gotten between the gearing (it almost caused me to swear off ballasting anymore track).

 

I would give the trucks a thorough cleaning, then inspect the gears and lube them.

Last edited by Bob Delbridge

I do see some variation in this.  Some engines do very well at 1-2 SMPH.  Others steady out at 3.  I do think there are a lot of factors involved, most with the motors and gearing condition.

 

MUs and Slave units can be another area of concern, were performance is better above 3 SMPH.  Again age and condition can have an effect.

 

Just recently I had to do a repair on an Slave unit were one motor would drag until higher SMPH selected in forward.  If moving in reverse it would start rotating properly.

Moving the motor to a different location did not correct the behavior.  So even can motors can have issues in a specific direction.   G

Thanks to all for the feedback. The 036 curves do seem to be a place where the speed seems to oscillate very slightly. I also have a lot of switch sections in series that could be a contributor. I did add some Labelle heavy oil (can't remember the #) to the gears under the trucks on an S1. Then gave it a good run at 15 smph for a few laps. Low speed control was noticeably improved. Maybe it helps to loosen things up a little.

 

I have a Lionel Legacy GP9 and it has exceptional low speed control. I seem to remember reading that Lionel speed control technology is different than the tach tape+reader that MTH uses.

Gear ratio, gear teeth cut method (helical cut is better than the straight cut found on most locos), backlash due to tolerance of the machined gears and the precision of the DC motor/s has a lot to do with the slow running of these locos. Of course the electronics and how they measure and correct for speed accuracy also is a major factor.

For smoother running at low speeds, the gear ratio should be such that the DC motor spins fast enough to be in its sweet torque and horse power rating. It is better to have a high gear ratio where the DC motor is spinning faster and hence allows better low speed control.

 

Having TWO DC motors adds to the problem if they are not 100% matched and synch'd and will cause them to fight each other some what.

It has nothing to do with the gearing but everything to do with the algorithms that MTH is using in the firmware esp. in the motor drive area. With DCC you can fine tune all the voltages that a motor receives including but not limited to say the kick voltage & time as adjusting these two would eliminate the 1 smph lurching by sending the motor a bit more juice for a millisecond to help "kick" it thru a stall. Motors will "hang" when the armature is rotating in the magnetic field. Skewed armatures are better but they still hang.

 

I firmly believe that MTH is using a generic algorithm as fine tuning it for every single different loco would be both time & money consuming. That's why MTH advertises slow speed down to 3 smph.

 

As far as real 1:1 locomotives being able to do the slow speed crawl they do..as in hump service and those pulling the tie replacement, ballast cleaning ribbon rail train. 

Gearing, and the truck tolerances and design have a tremendous effect on the cruise performance.  Sure algorithms matter too.  MTH has done work on that also.  You have to remember this PWM powering can have big effects.

 

Unfortunately, some of the MTH truck drives are lacking in the improvements I have seen in Atlas and Lionel trucks.  If you don't think the precision of the manufacturing process and the design of the gearing doesn't matter, do some comparisons. 

 

Precision trucks with less friction will prevent the motors from having to hunt to maintain speed and will result in smoother operations at low speeds.  G

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