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I realize that when running trains with either DCS or Command 18 volts is required. It seems that depending on the weight of the train or if running 2 engines at once or a passenger train with lights voltage can drop by as much as 5 volts. I am using an MTH Z4000to power my layout. Is there a way to have the 18 volts regulated so that no matter what the situation is there will be a steady 18 volts at all times. Thanks in advance.

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Well, with cruise control it shouldn't matter as much if there are small voltage changes.  OTOH, if you're seeing a 5 volt drop, you have wiring issues!  I just connected a Lionel PowerHouse 180, open circuit it showed 18.9 volts.  With an 8.7 amp load, it dropped to 17 volts.  A drop of five volts is excessive!

I pulled out the Z4000 and repeated the test.  You have to discount the open-circuit voltage displayed on the Z4000, it's somewhat bogus.  22 volts is the actual voltage with a very light load, 50 ohms.  With a 2.2 amp load, I'm seeing 21 volts, and with a 9 amp load on the channel, I get 19 volts out of the Z4000.

I noticed if I set the Z4000 voltages using the 4000 remote device the voltage stays constant during operation, although the amps are limited to about 8 instead of 10.  Setting the voltage with the Z4000 handles I see the voltage moving up and down as the trains operate, but the max amps are then 10+ ...  What's the explanation for this happening?

Like I said, we run six PH180 bricks on the club layout.  Four are on four power districts on the mainline, the other two service sidings and accessories.  We also have an old ZW that does some other yards, I've added modern circuit breakers to each output of that one.  We never adjust the power on anything, and sometimes there are is a 10-11 car lighted passenger train and a long freight with 30-40 cars on the same power district.  Nobody notices any issues.  I've seen two long passenger trains follow each other around the loop, no power problems at all, much of the time they'd be on the same power district for a spell.  Other than when we have a derailment, I can't remember the last time a breaker tripped.

OG3RAIL posted:

So if I am doing some light switching in the yard  OR pulling a 20 car freight with an unpowered  engine  and one powered unit I should not have to adjust the output voltage on the transformer if I originally started by setting it to 18v with no load?

No.  Setting the Z-4000 at 18V no load is not near the maxim output and as the load (current draw) changes voltage will droop or lower.  So set the no load voltage higher.

Are you seeing any issues operating your trains in command mode?  If not, do not worry too much about the voltage.  G

No I never said that I was drawing an excessive amount of current I was just seeing a voltage drop when running 2 engines or pulling heavy trains which was causing my the engines to run erratically.But when I moved the handle on the Z4000 so that it was reading 18v again everything was fine.So the reason I asked the question was to find out if the Z4000  would regulate the output voltage.

 

gunrunnerjohn posted:

If you put an external meter on the track connection, you can see what the track is actually seeing.  However, if the Z4000 meter is dropping 5V under load, IMO something is wrong.

I use a meter at the actual point on the track where I want to see the voltage and then compare it to the voltage at the output of the Z4000.  The difference I guess is what is sucked up by the wire and connector resistance.

gunrunnerjohn posted:

Lionel Legacy and TMCC don't like more than 19 volts on the track.  DCS should be fine with a few more volts of track voltage.

Dale, I think Kerrigan jumped in with the 10A comment.

I meant that with the voltage set  by the 4000 remote, the breaker will trip at an 8amp load instead of the expected 10amps.  Setting the voltage with the transformer handles the max amps before breaker trip will be 10amps, as expected for Z4000 max output amps.

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