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Hi everyone, I have a GS-6 loco 20-3756 that has had speed control problems since I purchased it new 2 years ago.  It was repaired under warranty but the problem has recently resurfaced. Unfortunately I don't have the info on what was done to fix it. Here are the symnptoms.

After starting it up and turning the speed dial to 2 MPH, it starts to take off at high speed. When I hit DIR to reverse it, it stops suddenly. Then when I turn the speed up to 2 MPH it starts to take off at high speed in reverse.  Other functions on the engine seem to work fine.

I tried replacing the drawbar and made sure the connections were tight, but problem remained. I check all connections in the tender and the engine and only found thing loose: the tach board (see photo) which was loose in the mounting bracket. I looked at the bottom side of the tach board and based on the location of the tiny sensor, it would not be centered on the stripes unless it was part way out (and thus loose). But to test is that was the case, I  pushed the board in further until it was secure. That actually made the problem worse - now the engine takes off within a few seconds of applying power. Note by pushing the board in further, the sensor was no longer centered over the stripes.

Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated!



Thanks and best regards,

Walter

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  • ps3 tak board: PS3 steam engine GS6  20-3756
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For PS-3 if you have control over the engine function but no speed control the problem will be in the engine.  Not drawbar or tender since the boiler board and tach control this.

As long as reader is over stripes it should be fine.  Since it takes off you have no tach input.  So, tach reader bad, maybe intermittent wire break, or spacing as mentioned though you don't have much option on a PS-3 as the bracket and sensor are fixed.  Lastly could be a boiler board issue.  G

I've seen this issue on two PS3 GS4/GS6s. For some reason the bracket holding the tach gets bent down slightly and puts the tach just close enough to the flywheel that it can't read the stripes correctly. The fix I've found is to remove the tach mounting bracket, get it warm with a heat gun, and slightly bend it back to get the specified 1mm gap from the flywheel. That fixed the issue on both locomotives.

Hi everyone,

Turns out the tach sensor spacing was 2+ millimeters. I used Lou's heat gun approach to bend the plastic bracket down a bit to get it closer, and that fixed the problem. I still have some startup runaway problem under a certain power up condition, but the tach otherwise works fine. Thanks to all who contributed to solving my problem.

This plastic bracket issue does seem like a missapplication of somewhat flimsy plastic material in a millimeter level sensitivity. Seems like either a poor design or manufacturing implementation. Thankfully this user forum provides relief from such oversights.

Best regards,

Walter

I have an 0-8-0 late model PS2 that I posted about a while back. It will smooth out at 8 smph but below that it is very unsteady. Really atypical for a PS2 or 3 steam engine. The worst symptom is rolling the DCS speed wheel up to 5 smph. The engine sits for a second then lurches forward and moves in a jerky fashion that improves with speed. I had the shell off and didn't feel any resistance when turning the flywheel by hand. Also the tach reader looks to be positioned correctly. Any advice since we're on the subject?

Otherwise it's off to George and whatever it takes to get smooth low speed performance I LOVE this engine but really hate the low speed stagger.

Thanks

@Scott J posted:

I have an 0-8-0 late model PS2 that I posted about a while back. It will smooth out at 8 smph but below that it is very unsteady. Really atypical for a PS2 or 3 steam engine. The worst symptom is rolling the DCS speed wheel up to 5 smph. The engine sits for a second then lurches forward and moves in a jerky fashion that improves with speed. I had the shell off and didn't feel any resistance when turning the flywheel by hand. Also the tach reader looks to be positioned correctly. Any advice since we're on the subject?

Otherwise it's off to George and whatever it takes to get smooth low speed performance I LOVE this engine but really hate the low speed stagger.

Thanks

This could be a mechanical issue, if unsure how to go about diagnosing the issue, best to send it off to George for that diag……that could be any number of things creating a drag, and making the locomotive lug through those lower speed steps…..

Pat

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