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I have been searching through the DCS forum for a post that I read (or maybe imagined) about using the DCS Remote Commander in passive mode with switched sidings.  By doing so, when switching on power to the siding, the DCS Remote Commander is powered up and sends the watchdog signal.  Any Proto2/3 engines on the siding will see the watchdog and come up silent in command mode.

 

I thought gunrunnerjohn made this post.

 

Did I read this or am I hallucinating?

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I don't know if there was a specific thread but what you're describing is a known application of the DCS Remote Commander in situations where it's not practical to dedicate a TIU channel to the siding.

 

OTOH, the thread that I don't think has come up is how to share a single DCS Remote Commander to generate the power-on watchdog to multiple switched sidings in a yard or whatever.  This would involve some timed relays or the like.  It probably would not save much money in the end but would be a good extra-credit test question!

 

Oh, you also may be hallucinating but that's another topic.

John,

 

You're doing this the hard way. The easy way:

  • Highlight the engine in the remote's active or inactive engine list
  • Power on the siding and immediately press the thumbwheel.

Done! The engine comes up dark and silent in DCS mode.

 

This works for lashups, as well as individual engines.

 

This and a whole lot more is all in MTH’s “The DCS O Gauge Companion 2nd Edition", available for purchase as an eBook or a printed book at MTH's web store!

Last edited by Barry Broskowitz

it seems that both Barry's method, and the method involving using the DCS RC have their pros and cons. 

 

Using the DCS-RC is a more fail-safe method. But you would need to have one connected to each of the sidings (or am i not thinking correctly).

 

Barry's method (which I wasn't aware of before reading this post, so thanks Barry for yet another piece of DCS wisdom) doesn't require extra purchases, but does require some good diligence to ensure that the remote is ready and set before powering up the siding. 

John,

However, if you arrange the siding switching with a relay to connect the DCS-RC to the siding at power-up and then release it, it would be totally automated, no need to fool with the remote.

As I said, the hard way. You still need to "fool with the remote" to select and operate the engine.

 

Using my method, you don't need special wiring or relays, or the work to implement them - every place that you have a siding.

Sometimes you want to power up a siding, but not immediately run the locomotive parked there.  Also, if you have two or three locomotives parked on the same siding, you need to be REALLY quick on the remote.

 

Just a couple ways to skin the cat Barry.  I'm not saying either is better than the other, I'll let folks that actually want to operate this way decide that.

 

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