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Recently I got a Proto-sound 1 PRR Centipede from Trainz.com.  I lucked out, the one I got seemed brand new, unrun. I replaced the battery and have been running it, learning how to trigger the sound features,  work the couplers and so on.  I use the variable channel and control the power with the DCS remote.  I was also able to trigger the PFA effects as well.  I followed the  instructions to the letter on powering up the engine, turn the power up to 10 volts hear the double bell, then the engine sounds. At that point it is in the neutral state, then to move the loco, I hit the direction button and the train moves.  It was very responsive, I only had to increase the volts to 12 or 13.  So I pulled a passenger consist around my layout for a while without any problems.  Next I decided to give the smoke units a try.  I switched them on underneath the engine and proceeded to run the startup sequence.  Everything started up fine, the engine was in neutral, the smoke units were churning out huge amounts of smoke.  Then hit the direction button to move the train and it tripped the breaker on the transformer.  I turned the smoke units back off and everything ran fine again. Is this something common that can happen? Can it be fixed?   I have not had a lot of experience with PS 1 engines.  I hope there is someone who can give me some advice on what I can do.  I want to say thanks in advance to anyone who can help!



Scott

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Yep,

The original passenger consist I was having trouble with was a Lionel Heavyweight set with multiple lighted BP mail and baggage cars.  The set in the video is an MTH set and running it with the Centipede, I did not have any problems.  I have a couple of questions, the loop of track I was running the Centipede on is powered by a Lionel 180 watt power brick. Another OGR Member suggested getting a Panel Amp Meter so I can see when I am approaching an overload?  What  is max number of Amps it can handle safely?  Thanks again for everyone's input.

The PH180 has a 10A electronically controlled circuit breaker.  It is capable of 10A continuous operation, but any sudden power surge may go over and trip it.  Other transformers with thermal breakers will tolerate much longer overload conditions before the breaker trips.

I've tested a PH180 with a 9A measured load for over an hour and it never missed a beat.  When you get near a circuit protection rating, sometimes it's not an exact threshold, I doubt there's anything wrong with the PH180.

I had a consist of a dozen MTH Premier SuperLiners, each car drew a bit over half an amp, so the whole consist was pulling close to seven amps.  Didn't leave much margin for anything but a simple engine, something with multiple smoke units would surely trip the breaker.  Now those cars have LED lighting, each car consumes around 35 milliamps, and the whole consist pulls less than half an amp of power.

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