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How do I know when I am reaching the limit on my engine or power to the track.  I am using DCS with 180watt Powerhouses.  I want to run multiple MTH Standard gauge engines with lots of 200 series cars.  How do I know when I am reaching the amperage limit? How do I make sure I don't get the engines too hot?  When I run conventional mode with my ZW, I can use the meter on the ZW to tell me how much load I have.  I don't have that with DCS.

Thanks,

George

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gunrunnerjohn posted:

Well, if you're sticking to one PH180 for a channel, you'll know when you've reached the limit as the PH180 breaker will trip.

I like this answer.  The PH180 will protect me.  

Will it protect my engine from overheating too?  I mean, is it possible to overload the engine motor (PS2) without blowing the breaker?  If so, do I need an Amp Meter to keep me at a lower level of Amps and any recommendation on what that would be?

gunrunnerjohn posted:

I think the MTH Std gauge locomotives in an MU will reach 10 amps before it reaches overload.   Since you have more than one on a single track with 10 amps available, I can't see any way that they'd overheat before the breaker would trip unless something is wrong with them.

OK.  Thank you for helping.  I just want to be cautious as I plan for a long train.

Sounds like using the PH180 is a good idea.  My LHS said the same about them when I was looking into power supplies.  They said the MTH ones are good too, but I wanted the larger bricks.

George

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