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Thanks to the help I received here I was able to get my new Legacy base and Cab2 installed on my layout. Again the Layout consists of two seperate loops of track. Track one the outer loop is powered by a Lionel 135W Powerhouse now connected through a Legacy power Master. Track two is powered by a 135w powerhouse through a TPC3000 .Both tracks are connected to the legacy base binding post. Operationally all is working ok I run legacy engines on the outer loop and TMCC as well as MTH eigines (seperately) on the inner loop. I also have two switched installed on the track two loop. The issue I'm having is I cannot build a route so that both switches fire in the same direction either out or straight. However the switches can be switched individually from the cab2 remote. So the switches do work.

I have followed the instructions in the manual for building a route however when finished and I try to use the route it does not work. The switches do no fired when the fire icon is pressed. Now there is one statement in the procedure that says to save the route information and that is "watch the on screen prompts and wait until you see the message ROUTE Created! then press CTC to exit. I NEVER SEE THIS MESSAGE. Once again any help or suggestion would be greatly appreciated.

All track and switches are MTH.

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the switches are connected to an ASC-3000 controller same a Lionel ASC 300. The switches are getting power from aux 18 volts . so I don't think  its a power issue.  The more I think about the problem I think it's related to the connection of the TPC-3000 and legacy base. Currently the TPC is connect to legacy using the DB 9 connection which is data and com.  The command base is is removed. So perhaps I need to get a Legacy PM and replace the TPC-3000. Thanks for your help.

A follow up on the route dilemma. I called Lionel customer service and spoke with a representative that was able to work with me and solve the problem. As it turns out the problem had noting to do with wiring or hardware. The solution was you can't use the same number on the route designations as the switches are designated. That was the mistake I was making when building a route. Unknowing I was using #1 and #2 as route designations. as soon as we changed the route designation to some other number in this case route 10 and route 11 everything work fine. Nowhere in the manual does it point this out. Also the reference in the manual to "route created"is wrong it was "route save". So hopefully this info helps someone in the future.

by the way Lionel's customer service was excellent.

I checked and I do have #5 in #5 route, but it doesn’t throw all the switches I have programmed on it even when I remove #5. I’ve never had reliable consistent results when switching more than just a couple switches in the routes. I have command switches and SC2 modules driving them. I use the command switches on the SC2 positions #1 because I’ve always had issues with position #1 even after cutting the trace on the SC2s. The many switch routes work better if I slow the rate of switching down. After more than 10 years using TMCC and Legacy, I feel that the the designers of these train electronics are talented, but I would not trust them to fly me to the moon.

 I am using MTH switches and MTH track so no experience with Lionel command switches. That did come up in my discussion with the Lionel tech and she mentioned that they have  button you  press to program them  but i'm sure you are way past that point. Also the other difference is I am not using the SC2. I'm still using the old ASC-3000 .  As of now my issue is solved and although I did have 4 switches programmed under TMCC using routes I have changed my track layout down to two switches. .

cjack posted:

After more than 10 years using TMCC and Legacy, I feel that the the designers of these train electronics are talented, but I would not trust them to fly me to the moon.

Chuck, when I designed avionics, there was a LOT more care put into insuring reliable operation than any consumer product, nature of the beast.  You tend to be more careful when a mistake can cause a couple hundred people to die!  Toy trains are... well, toys.  While most of the stuff is pretty well designed, it hardly gets the exhaustive analysis and testing that mission critical systems get. 

Remember, a Mars lander crashed because of a simple math conversion error in the code, so even mission critical systems don't work all the time.

1999: NASA lost its $125-million Mars Climate Orbiter because spacecraft engineers failed to convert from English to metric measurements when exchanging vital data before the craft was launched, space agency officials said Thursday.

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