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I have TMCC and I would like to have a better understanding of what a LionChief and/or a LionChief+ can and cannot do with TMCC. I'm am starting to believe they're not at all compatible, is this true?? Any input would be helpful with York just around the corner and I may be investing in a LionChief set but if it isn't compatible with TMCC my money might be better spent on a TMCC loco.     Lenny J

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LionChief and LionChief+ are a remote control system which cannot be controlled with TMCC.  Each engine comes with its own remote and only that remote can control the train.  Lionel is coming out with a single LionChief remote which will control all LionChief engines.  Just think of it as a third control system.  You can run them on the same track as TMCC but you must use its specific remote to control the train.

If by compatible you mean operated at the same time on the same track without interfering with each other, they are fully compatible.  But you must use the cab-1 or cab-2 to operate the TMCC loco in command mode, and the LionChief or LionChief Plus remote to control the respective loco in command mode.  They are independent but compatible with each other.  Furthermore, unlike TMCC/Legacy locos, the remote for the loco is included with each and every LionChief set and LionChief Plus loco.  So when you buy a LionChief set or LionChief Plus loco, you also get a "free" additional remote for your layout.

What do you mean free and additional? I am sure Lionel included a cost/profit on the remote.  Especially since the expensive transformer went away and the LC set price is similar to a conventional.

 

You need the remote to operate the LC or LC+ train so it isn't additional.  It is required.   By your standard, MTH DCS engines and Lionel Legacy are compatible.  They both can run on the same track in conventional, or run via DCS as long as you have the Lionel Command base installed.  But we all know that that type of compatibility is not what folks on this forum call compatibility.

 

You sound like a used car salesman, not trying to offend any car salesman on this forum, 

 

 

"What do you mean free and additional?"

 

Compared with other command equipment, it means that you don't have to go out and spend $300 to have a remote that will control the Lionel LionChief or LionChief Plus loco you just purchased in command mode.

 

"But we all know that that type of compatibility is not what folks on this forum call compatibility."

 

We do? Now you speak for the whole forum?   I responded as I did precisely because one could not be sure what the original poster meant by compatibility.  I was trying to be informative and helpful.

 

"You sound like a used car salesman, not trying to offend any car salesman on this forum"

 

Seriously, you expect a used car salesman to read that and not be offended?  No one, least of all me, wishes to know your opinion on what I sound like.  I can assure you that my daily work is entirely reputable, as is that of most used car salesmen and saleswomen .  

 

I don't waste my time trying to discredit the opinions of others.  Or questioning the character of others, be they car salesmen or otherwise. 

 

And yes, DCS and Legacy/TMCC locos are compatible in the sense I discussed.  The original poster did not ask "can I operate a LionChief loco with my TMCC cab-1?"  He asked whether they were compatible.  Not inter-operable. 

Last edited by Landsteiner

Both Lion Chief and Lion Chief+ run with 18v power on the track. Both come with their own dedicated remotes. Neither are compatible with TMCC. This means if you have 10 LC locomotives you will have 10 individual remotes. Lionel is introducing a universal remote that can operate up to 3 LC or LC+ locomotives at a time.

LC+ can also be controlled the traditional way by moving the transformer control back and forth. However if you run LC+ in this mode you lose the ability to control many of the other sound features.

 

 

Originally Posted by areizman:

Both Lion Chief and Lion Chief+ run with 18v power on the track. Both come with their own dedicated remotes. Neither are compatible with TMCC. This means if you have 10 LC locomotives you will have 10 individual remotes. Lionel is introducing a universal remote that can operate up to 3 LC or LC+ locomotives at a time.

LC+ can also be controlled the traditional way by moving the transformer control back and forth. However if you run LC+ in this mode you lose the ability to control many of the other sound features.

 

 

Good summary. And I'd always recommend the Lion Chief Plus locos. Yes, their price point is higher than plain vanilla Lion Chief but they are great locos for the money. Speed control, smoke, sounds, and ability to run them conventionally all add up to a winner.

"Since lion chief remotes are loco specific you don't get a "free" remote unless all your locos are exactly the same."

 

So what's a better deal, a remote that enables command control for only that single loco and which comes at no additional cost, or $300 plus for a system that enables you to access your DCS or TMCC/Legacy loco?  I made the case that ability to use your loco in command mode from the getgo with no additional expense is a good, perhaps better value.  Your mileage may vary, but only if you already own DCS or TMCC/Legacy.

Let's be clear, nobody is going to mistake most of the LC+ stuff for Legacy.  The LC+ Camelback I have is pretty nice, but I'd have paid more to have it in full Legacy.  You do get something for the extra money, though you can argue all day if it's worth it.  The cost of the Legacy system isn't all that significant when spread over twenty or thirty Legacy locomotives.

 

 

LOL. I am with John on this, you try to say your definition is standard because it is from a dictionary, yet your facts are distorted and confusing.  That is my main point to you.

 

When you buy a legacy or DCS set is the remote free?  You just pay for the base.

 

Trying to compare it with Legacy or DCS distorts the comparison.

 

The bottom line is you need a remote to run LC.  It comes in the set.  No remote, no operation.  Not only that, but you need a different remote for each different engine.  Same with LC+, though LC+ can run conventionally.

 

Hence the reason Lionel created the multi unit remote to at least give you a remote that can operate three engines.  Want a fourth to run at the same time, need another remote.  

 

You can run Legacy on a DCS layout with a Legacy remote and base, or vice versa with DCS.  Are they compatible?   G

" you try to say your definition is standard because it is from a dictionary, yet your facts are distorted and confusing.  That is my main point to you."

 

And your point is utterly without meaning.  The word "compatible," has meant the same thing for many decades.  And DCS and Legacy are compatible, but not interoperable. Just like LionChief and LionChief Plus and all other command systems.

 

"When you buy a legacy or DCS set is the remote free?  You just pay for the base."

 

I used the word "free" in parentheses, which is common English usage, just like actual definitions of words . This comment is easily understood to mean something quite different from what you are claiming.  It means that for the hobbyist with TMCC and one TMCC remote, he or she gets not only a locomotive but a "free" remote with a LionChief or LionChief Plus locomotive purchase.  I'm confident that 95-99% of the readers understood that point.  If he already has two or more TMCC or Legacy remotes, he gets another remote that can work with that engine, something that does not happen with any MTH set or loco, for example.

 

"Trying to compare it with Legacy or DCS distorts the comparison."

 

What would you like to compare it to, apple sauce or an automatic transmission?

 

"The bottom line is you need a remote to run LC.  It comes in the set.  No remote, no operation.  Not only that, but you need a different remote for each different engine.  Same with LC+, though LC+ can run conventionally."

 

Try operating your PS2/PS3 or Legacy/TMCC loco in command mode without the remote.

 

"Hence the reason Lionel created the multi unit remote to at least give you a remote that can operate three engines.  Want a fourth to run at the same time, need another remote."

 

And if you want to have someone operate your PS2/PS3 or Legacy/TMCC locos at the same time, such as one of your friends or relatives, you need to spring for $150 for another remote.  The remote that comes with each and every LionChief and LionChief Plus loco at no extra cost ("free").   

 

"You can run Legacy on a DCS layout with a Legacy remote and base, or vice versa with DCS.  Are they compatible?" 

 

Yes, according to some hundred or more years of English usage.  They may not be "geelfussful," however.   You want to make up your own imaginary definitions of common English words, no one can stop you .  It ain't me who is distorting and confusing reality.

 

You don't think much of LionChief or LionChief Plus; I get that.  Fortunately for Lionel and the hobby, there are tens of thousands of consumers for whom these products fulfill a purpose, even if you don't get it (or the word compatible ), or like it.

 

My comments are entirely factual and correct.  LionChief and LionChief Plus are not directly in competition with Legacy, and they provide a different value/function/features equation that is entirely unique in the hobby at this time.  All the disdain shown by those who prefer the more feature laden, scale oriented and expensive products will not change those realities.  Not everyone is you .

Last edited by Landsteiner

Well, I am a few years late to this forum, but for others like me just getting a LionChief loco this is interesting reading.  I would suggest that for persons (like me) operating a small layout: the LionChief system is the best thing that ever happended to model railroading.  I have studied the Lionel's TCMM and Legacy systems and have owned a RailKing Proto 3.0 locomotive that I operated with the DCS Remote Commander system which I would say is sort of at the same level as the LionChief.  LionChief wins hands down!!  The remote is easy to use and maintains great contact with the loco.  It enables all the basic functions that would have been considered miraculous a generation ago: horn, bell, direction, speed control, electro-couplers with some crew chatter thrown in!  The best part is that it is not only functional but it is cheap!  Of course the cost of the remote is included in the cost of the loco, but there are no other components to buy, truly plug and play!  The last thing I want with a small layout is a bunch of wiring and black boxes.  I know that they can do everything except order a pizza, but the remotes for TCMM, Legacy and MTH DCS look like something out of NASA Mission Control.  The low end MTH DCS Remote Commander has a very unintutive speed control function and seems to lose signal in at close range.

I know most of the people interested in this forum and in the 1% of tech savvy model railroaders but I have to believe that most of us couldn't do better than LionChief.  By the way, except for a lack of scale offerings, the LionChief Plus locos are terrific: very smooth operation, nice sounds, smoke, directional lighting, electro-couplers.   Easily the equivalent of RailKing Proto 3.0 are a lower price point.

Hope this is of some use to small timers like me wandering through the maze of gee whiz model train control systems.  By the way, like all electronics the pace of change is likely only going to accelerate, so good luck keeping up!

Well, since this resurrected thread is almost five years old ,  it's important to mention that LC and LC+ have now been surpassed, so to speak,  by Lion Chief 2.0. LC and LC+ are still being offered but the latest and greatest is 2.0.   

See the chart in the 2020 catalog for a good breakdown on all of the Lionel control systems.

Last edited by johnstrains

Yes, I actually learned about LC+2 just after making my post.  Like I said it will be hard to keep up! 

LC+2 or LionChief Plus 2.0 seems to be a real step up from LC+ because it supports more locomotive features, and can be operated with the Legacy and TCMM systems in addition to the LionChief universal remote, which should satisfy people interested in compatibility (as in one controller running various types of locomotive). The LC+2 locos apparently don't come packaged with a remote, but that's ok as they will be a step up and maybe a second loco for someone that started with a basic LionChief, or LC+.  I very much like the fact that the LC+2 can be operated with the LionChief universal remote, which being able to control 3 trains will be all I need.

I, and probably many others, can't wait to upgrade my LionChief Polar Express Berkshire with the new LC+2 version, so hopefully this line will be very successful for Lionel.   Nice to have a quality loco with so many features operable by a simple, easy to use remote!!

I am waiting for a pre-ordered LC 2.0, which will be my 1st, hoping to receive it late Spring 2020 according to my LHS, so I cannot comment on it yet, except to say I can't wait to get it. I will run it either with the LionChief App or using the universal remote, which I already have.

Regarding LC+, I have 3 of them and am quite pleased. Keep in mind, if you like detail, some have more detail than others. My favorite is the LC+ Erie Camelback because it has excellent detail IMO, much more than my other 2 LC+ locos.

I am most pleased with their relatively affordable prices and user friendliness, and the fact they are a lot of fun to operate. Arnold

Last edited by Arnold D. Cribari

Second (and third) what a great feature set the "+" models are. Though I'm definitely a conventional/remote guy, my kids' interests went up-up-up once they learned they could use their "phones" for control. In my household, at least, it's a killer app.

Can't wait for the 2 LC2.0s awaiting delivery: a Berkshire Pere Marquette and a GG1.

Noice!

- The Other Guy

PDBRule posted:

Well, I am a few years late to this forum, but for others like me just getting a LionChief loco this is interesting reading.  I would suggest that for persons (like me) operating a small layout: the LionChief system is the best thing that ever happended to model railroading.  I have studied the Lionel's TCMM and Legacy systems and have owned a RailKing Proto 3.0 locomotive that I operated with the DCS Remote Commander system which I would say is sort of at the same level as the LionChief.  LionChief wins hands down!!  The remote is easy to use and maintains great contact with the loco.  It enables all the basic functions that would have been considered miraculous a generation ago: horn, bell, direction, speed control, electro-couplers with some crew chatter thrown in!  The best part is that it is not only functional but it is cheap!  Of course the cost of the remote is included in the cost of the loco, but there are no other components to buy, truly plug and play!  The last thing I want with a small layout is a bunch of wiring and black boxes.  I know that they can do everything except order a pizza, but the remotes for TCMM, Legacy and MTH DCS look like something out of NASA Mission Control.  The low end MTH DCS Remote Commander has a very unintutive speed control function and seems to lose signal in at close range.

I know most of the people interested in this forum and in the 1% of tech savvy model railroaders but I have to believe that most of us couldn't do better than LionChief.  By the way, except for a lack of scale offerings, the LionChief Plus locos are terrific: very smooth operation, nice sounds, smoke, directional lighting, electro-couplers.   Easily the equivalent of RailKing Proto 3.0 are a lower price point.

Hope this is of some use to small timers like me wandering through the maze of gee whiz model train control systems.  By the way, like all electronics the pace of change is likely only going to accelerate, so good luck keeping up!

I agree.  I have several LC, LC+, and waiting on a LC+ 2.0 (pre-ordered from Charles Ro).  It started with a Christmas set in 2018 and has expanded ever since.  I have no doubt that the scale Legacy is better quality and more features.  I cannot afford that equipment so it is a moot point from my perspective.   IMO the LC starter sets represent the future for this hobby in that it will bring in more younger people to the railroading hobby.  I love RC loco's because it is so easy and economical.   I can power a loop of track(or more loops) with (4) 72 watt LC wall warts which totals 288 watts all for $160.  I can have  LC remotes(including the universal remote) run several trains on the same loop with no special wiring.  I will have electrical blocks that can be switched off/on on sidings and in the yard.  It is a win win for me.

Nessmuck posted:

Does that 0-6-0 Lionchief + 2.0 that’s due in July...come with a tender ? Thanks

If you are talking about the 0-6-0T that JOHNTRAINS posted, the answer is no.  The T stands for "tank" and no tender is needed/included.   I have one of these pre ordered from Charles Ro as well.  These smaller steam loco's were used in yards and dockside and the tank could not hold as much as a tender.   These were rarely used on the mainline, if ever.

dan 77 posted:

I can power a loop of track(or more loops) with (4) 72 watt LC wall warts which totals 288 watts all for $160.

A VERY bad idea IMO!  Regulated DC power supplies should not be paralleled, any slight component differences can create a situation where they start fighting with each other.  Also, you have basically no track short circuit protection with that option.  15+ amps with no circuit protection can do a lot of wheel welding in a derailment.  Much better option for around $130 street price is to buy the PowerHouse 180 with it's excellent electronic circuit breaker.

dan 77 posted:
Nessmuck posted:

Does that 0-6-0 Lionchief + 2.0 that’s due in July...come with a tender ? Thanks

If you are talking about the 0-6-0T that JOHNTRAINS posted, the answer is no.  The T stands for "tank" and no tender is needed/included.   I have one of these pre ordered from Charles Ro as well.  These smaller steam loco's were used in yards and dockside and the tank could not hold as much as a tender.   These were rarely used on the mainline, if ever.

Thanks for that. Iam trying to find an 0-6-0 with a tender in Lionchief+ 2.0 ....to model the Conway RR here in New Hampshire,that goes over the Frankenstein Trestle.

After reading all this I just had to chime in. I own all the available control systems and have to say I’m very impressed by LionChief. It started with the Thomas set for my grandson. By the age of 23 months he was able to turn on the 180W brick I gave him and turn on his controller to run Thomas. He understands the speed control and the 3 function buttons. I think this is fantastic!!! Lionel has created a tool that will bring new young blood into the hobby! At 27 months my grandson now uses my DCS dust as good as me. I’m now planning to convert my new granddaughter’s pink “Girls Set” to LionChief so she will be able to enjoy her trains like her brother. You guys who are poo pooing LionChief are missing the point of the system. LionChief is entry level at its best! My only negative is steamers with a tender have no headlight for running in reverse (camelbacks). One last comment, saying LionChief + and 2.0 don’t come with a controller isn’t  true, it’s called a cell phone with Lionel’s free app!

Trainmstr posted:

You guys who are poo pooing LionChief are missing the point of the system. LionChief is entry level at its best! My only negative is steamers with a tender have no headlight for running in reverse (camelbacks).

Who's poo pooing LC?  It's great for what it is.  You're expressing your opinion, aren't we entitled to ours?

Trainmstr posted:

One last comment, saying LionChief + and 2.0 don’t come with a controller isn’t  true, it’s called a cell phone with Lionel’s free app!

The cell phone comes free with the LC+ 2.0 engines?  I didn't realize that!

"Who's poo pooing LC?" 

To be fair, while you have not been doing so at all, a fair number of folks have been ragging on LC over the last half decade.   LC wasn't intended for them so it made no sense and must be a terrible, disastrous mistake.  Well, the marketplace has spoken and it's a hit.  LC has a more favorable price point than any other O gauge set line of sets or starter locomotives with command capability (just bought one for $179). 

Lionel has and still does provide a command control remote with every single LC and LC+ set/loco,  until this last year or so, where there are some separate sale LC+ locos without remotes.  LC+ 2.0 is yet another step in the evolution of the system, resembling Legacy-lite or TMCC rather than LC or LC+. 

Turns out Lionel knows more about its market than some of the self-appointed wunderkinds here .  If a Legacy to LC and/or LC to Legacy bridge is brought to market, the evolution will be complete in most ways.

For those concerned about the future of the hobby (I'm not one), the availability of a Thomas the Tank set with digital command control and an enclosed remote at $150 from Charles Ro is something no one else comes close to providing.  Your child or grandchild (or 95 year old auntie or uncle Bob) who likes Thomas can operate the little fellow on your 20 foot by 60 foot superdetailed DCS/Legacy layout with no modifications or additional equipment to what's enclosed in the box.  That's kind of nice,  it seems to me.

Just as an aside and sort of on point...

I'm all in on LC+ (and the new LC 2.0) and have quite a few LC+ locos, steam and diesel. They're great!  But I also just placed my preorder for the new Lionel Area 51 Set which is LC with the remote. "Plain vanilla" LC not usually my cup of tea but really think this will be a cool and fun set. Especially with the new lighted FasTrack.

So the "marketing" got me in the end.

Landsteiner posted:

"Who's poo pooing LC?" 

To be fair, while you have not been doing so at all, a fair number of folks have been ragging on LC over the last half decade.   LC wasn't intended for them so it made no sense and must be a terrible, disastrous mistake.  Well, the marketplace has spoken and it's a hit.  LC has a more favorable price point than any other O gauge set line of sets or starter locomotives with command capability (just bought one for $179). 

I was just at a train show where the recent Lionel LionChief U36B Lehigh Valley train set was running. Now I don't know if they were using the wall-wort or a transformer. I've read where you can use a transformer and set the voltage to the track a little lower than the standard 18 volts for these LC engines.

BUT that engine was running slow and steadily the entire time I was there. And it was just left to run on its' own: No one had the remote in their hand, speeding up the engine on the curves. Granted, it was straight and level track. And granted it was on FasTrack with the wider 36 inch curves. But still the train speed was slow and very consistent, and I was duly impressed for a starter set with just basic features.

Now, the LV hopper in the set is silver, not grey. And the LV diamond on the caboose is smeared a little bit due to the body rivets it is printed over. I've seen other starter rolling stock where that wasn't an issue. But that's a quibble for another thread. Maybe because the LV is one of my favorite roads that I'm a little more picky. 

Last edited by brianel_k-lineguy

Price point is an important element of the LionChief line, and Lionel has repeatedly acknowledged its lower cost product lines is where the bulk of its train sales are. (And, in fact, make production of its higher-end Legacy line possible.)

But let’s be clear on how Lionel achieves that price point. Yes, the simplified electronics saves some money over Legacy, but Lionel has primarily kept the price low by making use of older tooling in the LionChief model line. The U36B dates back to the early 1970s. The NW2 tooling is postwar era. The A5 comes from K-Line tooling nearly 20 years ago. Even the forthcoming Polar Express engine is from now-15-year-old tooling.

That’s important. Because if Lionel were forced to create all new tooling for larger scale-sized locomotives, the price would skyrocket.

I like the LionChief line. I own a half-dozen already, including the original Thomas release and several LionChief Plus models. But I wouldn’t call it the ”future of our hobby” if that phraseology is meant to include all-new massive steamers Lionel produces today.

LionChief Plus 2.0 is an upgrade, of course, from basic LionChief, but the sub-$500 mark is still key to its strong sales. (The Lionmaster Allegheny, at $1,100 list, and the F3 sets, at more than $600, are obvious signs Lionel will see what the market will bear.)

My only criticism of the LionChief line was in the use of cheaper components in the drive train early on to save on production costs. It sounds like Lionel has improved newer releases, in that respect. 

"But I wouldn’t call it the ”future of our hobby” if that phraseology is meant to include all-new massive steamers Lionel produces today."

It's the future of the hobby insofar as reasonable volume sales are concerned.  The public is not going to be buying thousands or tens of thousands of $1,000-2,000 locomotives ever is my guess .  If one expects or hopes the hobby will be around in 20 years, it's going to be due to Lionel and LC/LC+ type locos in sets that are affordable for a larger percent of the buying public. 

Lionel's brand recognition and the continued ability to purchase a set for $150-300 street price will make or break the hobby in the longer term.  It won't be MTH, which might or might not survive Mike Wolf's eventual retirement or sale of the company; it won't be Bachmann's O gauge lineup and it won't be 3rd Rail for sure. 

Personally, I'm not concerned about the 20+ year future due to my own age and my general feeling that "what will be will be."  But it's important to some folks and I like the idea that people will be enjoying a three rail toy train around the tree or similar pleasure in the year 2050 as they were in 1950.  Most folks, perhaps almost all, buy a set and a few extra cars, some track, maybe a second locomotive and that's it. For that relatively dominant segment of the marketplace, Lionel and LC/LC+ are pretty much the only game in town for the future of the hobby is my prediction.

I am concerned about the future of the hobby, that is why I think LionChief is on target. I have ensured my grandchildren and all my little grand nieces and nephews have a train set for around their Christmas trees. Though I won’t be around, nothing would make me happier than the thought that each of them continue the tradition of trains around the tree with their own children and grandchildren. I’ll do my part but I believe LionChief will help continue the hobby for other families. Maybe I’m just sentimental but I think if my trains bring a smile to a family members face in the future I’ve done my part for the hobby. If they remember that Uncle Lenny provided the trains, then that’s a bonus.

I have 2 Lion Chief+ engines (NW2 and Pacific steamer) and am very happy with both. I was especially happy with the price point. I got simple command control for about the price of a Williams engine.

The upgrade to Lion Chief 2.0 seems to have added $200 which lifts purchases of these engines out of my price range. I would like F3's, but not at $500. The tooling is paid for and the slightly increased capabilities don't justify the price leap.

I suspect that my current engines may be the last two Lion Chief products I purchase. I'm not going to follow the latest releases upmarket pricing.

 

" I would like F3's, but not at $500." "I'm not going to follow the latest releases upmarket pricing."

You probably won't have to go for the LC+ 2.0 at higher prices if that's not your preference.  On p.135 are examples why not. Lionel is making separate sale LionChief diesels for about $220 that Charles Ro is selling for about $179.  These are GP38s, but there's no reason that an F3 won't be made in that line. Last year they made a RS-3 I believe.  These run well but don't have speed control.  Unless Lionel stops making separate sale Lionel LC locos, you should be able to pick up various types of steam and diesels at more modest price points as the years go on.  You probably will be able to purchase a set with a LC F3 at some point for about $250-350 that includes rolling stock, track and a power supply as well as the loco you want.

 

PS-Steam 0-6-0 locos on p. 134 at the same prices. None of these have electrocouplers, just ordinary operating thumbtack couplers, which contributes to the lower pricing no doubt.

Last edited by Landsteiner
BOB WALKER posted:

One of the key reasons for the eventual domination of LC in the future is that it is based on current state of the art high frequency signalling technology whereas TMCC/Legacy is based on 1960's era low frequency technology.

At the risk of getting overwhelmed with electrical engineering I had wondered why the LC systems don't require a track interface component like all the other command control systems. Seems they all should be able to communicate directly with the locos.🤔 Sure would be nice to save the expense and space from not having to use one of these black boxes.

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