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Hi, today I ran my Lionel legacy mikado around the layout a few times and it was smoking as usual. When I stopped the train, it stopped smoking and gave me the 3 cab light blinks indicating a smoke unit issue. I reset it, and it smoked for a few seconds, then it quit again. I reset another time, and it sounded like the smoke fan was trying to work but it just stopped altogether. Funny thing is, it has done this for 2 days now, and about a year ago, I had Lionel repair the smoke unit. It's really strange, as if the fan has a short in it, but I'm not sure. What could it be? Thanks.

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John's totally correct, it needs a fan motor. But I would also change the batting and clean the smoke unit completely. I fix a lot of these units for fellow forum members, what I'm finding when I open them up is an over abundance of smoke fluid. I also find plenty of smoke fluid inside the fan motor's, which seems to me is killing these motor's. Believe it or not, sometimes I blow out the fan motor's with compressed air and they work again. IMO everyone is using way to much smoke fluid.

 

Thanks,

Alex

It is possible that "some of these Smoke fan" issues are operator induced. This is just a guess on my part. May be an operator puts smoke fluid in, he sees no smoke, he puts more fluid in, now the smoke reservoir is too full and floods into the fan motor assembly and then it trickles down into the motor brushes/wires and causes the motor to stall. The smoke circuit senses an over current situation due to smoke fluid or motor stalled and shows the three blinks of fan death!....possible?

Sam
 
While I would tend to agree, the biggest issue seems to be the "sensitivity" of the error circuitry which renders the smoke unit dead.  It seems possibly they might need, and Jon Z alluded to, that perhaps some code change is in order to decrease the sensitivity.  Just my opinion.
 
Originally Posted by BigBoy4014:

It is possible that "some of these Smoke fan" issues are operator induced. This is just a guess on my part. May be an operator puts smoke fluid in, he sees no smoke, he puts more fluid in, now the smoke reservoir is too full and floods into the fan motor assembly and then it trickles down into the motor brushes/wires and causes the motor to stall. The smoke circuit senses an over current situation due to smoke fluid or motor stalled and shows the three blinks of fan death!....possible?

 

Last edited by MartyE
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