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I have a 12' x 12' loop of Fastrack. It has been working well up until today. No switches or sidings - just a continuous loop. There are 4 power feeder wires connected at equal distances around the loop. They connect to an electric bus bar which is in turn connected to the Z-1000 transformer. The only other connection to the loop is a Marx semaphore which is connected to a section of Lionel accessory activation Fastrack. The light for the semaphore is connected to a bus that is tied to the accessory terminal of the Z-1000 transformer. The lights work OK. The semaphore had been working correctly. Suddenly - today, after powering up the track the Z-1000 trips its breaker. (several and every time) I removed all rolling stock from the track. Same result. I checked all feeder wire and activation track wires to the track to see if they are secure and can see nothing amiss. There is no visible obstacle laying across the rails. Any suggestions you have as to how to find and/or repair the short are greatly appreciated.

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Take the leads to the Marx off the the Z and check again. If it trips the breaker you have track power issues. But before you leap, IMO, the correct chase scenario here is process of elimination, so disconnecting the track and trying again with no load at all checks the transformer out. Add the Marx back in to confirm its operation. Then check you are using the correct polarity to trigger it (ie a hot actuator isn't near or touching a common on the track, more a tubular thing, but.....)

 

Yes, the burnt smell even differs slightly on coil vs wiring. The coil wire is lacquer coated vs rubber so they stink different too.

Id guess vibration and age are to blame over 14-15v or they would have a rep for burning up when new and supplied with a new Marx transformer. But over that 15v mark, I wouldn't balk at agreeing because that 15v is the max voltage Ive seen on a Marx trans.

  Imo vibration wearing out lacquer is the #1 failure on most linear coils of any type, trains, HVAC, games, washing machines, etc. Heat, causing lacquer to crack overtime, then failure, is a far second but not impossible (or if you include combo automotive starter motor/solenoids, I think the engines heat kills the extra heavy lacquer coating there)

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