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I am running the MRC prodigy wireless, which at 4 amps, will only run two locos fast.  Put on 3 and it overloads at moderate speed.

 

Can I just attach an 8A/15V laptop power supply at some point on the layout to boost the power?  I am only running one district, and the 8a/15v booster from MRC is about $150.  I have an old laptop power supply that I can use for free.

 

Anybody see any dangers or problems with doing this?

 

Martin

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Hi Martin,

If I read this correctly, you want to just attach the output of a filtered DC laptop power supply to the track bus at some point on the layout to have more current available at the rails.  That is a no-no on two levels.  One, it will very likely let the magic smoke out of the existing DCC booster on your system since you are back-feeding filtered DC current into the existing booster output that has an alternating current style square wave output.  Second, it just plain won't work.  The way DCC works is the command station (DCC brains) generates a high frequency square sign wave that is broken up into packets that gets sent out to be read by the DCC decoders in the locos.  However, prior to going to the rails, this low power square sign wave is sent to the DCC booster to be amplified and provide the current necessary to run the locos.  DCC is not a superimposed alternating square wave on top of a DC power bus.  The DCC square wave and the power to control the trains are one in the same, (just one wave form on the rails) they are not separate wave forms.

 

Therefore, if you want to add more current handling capabilities to your layout, then you need to add additional booster(s) along with adding their respective DCC booster power supplies.   A small phone-style cable will daisy chain interconnect between boosters signal line ports to carry the low power DCC signal generated by the command station.  Each booster then amplifies that low power signal and outputs it to the rails to a new isolated, e.g. double-gapped at both ends DCC booster district or “block” which the new booster now powers.  This new booster also provides isolated circuit breaker protection for its “block” so a short circuit, e.g. caused by a derailment, in that “block” will not take down power to other neighboring booster districts on the layout).  A DCC Booster district or “block” could be defined as a full loop of track, a yard area, an industrial switching area, or even just a stretch of track on a long run.

 

Therefore, the moral of the story is - more power to run more DCC locos means more DCC boosters (and booster power supplies).  But you get more isolated circuit breaker protection as a side benefit.

 

Scott K.

Austin, TX

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