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Pikey

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  1. Its less than £135 so I wouldn't be charged anything as far as I know, although maybe that only applies to EU purchases (?)
  2. Just received the Biffa bin lorry, which is a great model, and looks ideal for radio control conversion. A while ago, I bought a Turbo Racing transmitter and receiver set, a bit like this one: https://www.hobbyrc.co.uk/turbo-racing-p30-3ch-remote-controller Once you strip off the plastic housing, the receiver itself is small, but obviously many times bigger than a Deltang RX45. It also doesnt have an on-board ESC, so you need to use an external one. However, I think it will fit in the back of the bin lorry, as well as a big motor and a decent sized battery! I'm hoping to get this and a number of other projects finished for the Severn Valley on bank holiday weekend.
  3. Looking at the Tam Valley website, it says they can repair most damage to boards that are out of warranty for $25. Given that it will fit in a Large Letter sized jiffy bag, and postage to the USA is only a few pounds, I think I'll post it directly back to them for, hopefully, a repair which will be much cheaper than buying a new one 🙂 I have two spare Gaugemaster DCC80 'Autofrogs', and a couple of spare relays on the Megapoints system, so with a few hours of wiring buggeration I can get 4 of the 6 frogs powered by this juicer back up and running in the meantime. Avoiding such buggeration was one of the reasons I bought the frog juicers in the first place, but never mind.
  4. I have used Cobalts on my exhibition layout, they're excellent. But that layout has 4 sets of points - my home layout has over 40, and some of them require more than two associated switches, which is one of the reasons why I didnt use them.
  5. Low cost? This isn't a DCC decoder - these boards cost nearly £80...
  6. Ooh this is exactly what happened to mine. Except my resistors say R91 - so Tam Valley have changed the spec at some point. I bought mine in 2020.
  7. Last week my layout randomly shut itself down and refused to start up again. My layout is DCC with an ESU ECoS controller and Megapoints servo-operated points. Most point frogs are switched by corresponding relay boards, but for various reasons I also have 2 Tam Valley hex frog juicers which have worked fine (I presume) for 3-4 years, but last week one of them seems to have suffered total failure, which is causing a short circuit if I try and plug it back in. I can see two of the resistors have not completely melted but certainly have got very hot, on output 4. There are signs of this on outputs 2 and 3 as well, but 4 looks the worst. 1 5 and 6 appear as new. Pics below: I bought it from CoastalDCC in 2020. After emailing them, I've received a pretty unsatisfactory reply saying 'an actual short circuit on one of the outputs can take the unit out', which surprises me as there's nothing on their website or the Tam Valley website about this. Also, if there is ever a real short circuit, my ECoS shuts the power off immediately, so I cant see how this is possible - and in any case I was running a single train on a part of the layout not affected by this frog juicer when the failure happened. Has anyone else ever had one of these fail? Was it repairable / can they be repaired? And would I send it back to CoastalDCC for repair (or rather, for them to send it to Tam Valley for repair)? Jeff
  8. Well, I just found out that Deltang have ceased production and have no more receivers to sell. This makes converting tiny radio controlled models a lot harder, for sure! Micron sell a version which is at least four times the size, and Sol Expert sell a version which doesn't come pre-wired, and I think that's just about it as far as alternatives, currently anyway. Bit of a shame really 🙁
  9. Turbo Racing minis are also nice for a modern-image user :)
  10. Still havent finished the forklift! I have a model of a mk3 Transit to make, which is going to be a nice little thing when its done I think. I've recently ordered some motors from KKPMO, and they seem to be slightly revised (the 6mm motor is shorter, making it more suitable to put in smaller vehicles, plus they are pre-wired) and also their delivery times seem reasonable, and they have sent the correct products. Which is good. I have 120, 150 and 180rpm motors to try - as the 225 I put in my land rover turned out to be a bit too slow. Oh yeah - I did a new Land Rover too (apologies for video quality, I had to email it from my phone):
  11. Literally all I see on the railway lines near my house are 2 and 3 car Cross Country 170s, and Voyagers. I have a XC Voyager, but only have a London Midland class 170, which dates from when London Midland was still a thing (shows how old the model now is!) - but it still looks the business. I'd absolutely love a XC 170 - but the prices these fetch on ebay for a used model are frankly ridiculous - Bachmann could re-release the existing model, undercutting the prices people want on ebay for a used XC one, and surely loads of people would buy them 🙂
  12. I have a question - what are the 4 tiny things that look like the ends of a shovel, included in the detailing pack for 97301?
  13. I've bought a Kalmar forklift truck kit, from Sven Loeffler: https://www.mikromodelle.de/Onlineshop/de/3d-druckteilesatz-funktionsmodell-kalmar-stapler.html A very high quality 3D print in general, although the cab detail and driver figure are a bit naff. Also it doesnt come with wheels, or any instructions - although there are good pictures and its not hard to work out what goes where. It comes with 3 M1 nuts, but no M1 threaded bar, which is a strange choice as you only need 1 M1 nut so why supply three and not the bar? Gears are provided to drive the threaded bar from a 4mm motor, the other things you need are listed on the website - G26 motor/S15 screw /Z12 gear for driving, 4mm motor/M1 threaded bar for the forks, some bearings, and then the usual steering axle & servo, and electronics that you'd need for any RC vehicle. I sprayed it with the CAT yellow paint I bought for the CAT digger (which didnt match). Kalmar trucks are red, but I dont have any red paint so I thought I'd use what I had. Here's the underneath - you can see the recesses for the servo and the driving motor and bearings, good clearance for the steering (although I still had to file some away, probably the width of axle I chose was a bit too wide): I cut the cab detail off, binned the driver figure, and modified a spare one from a loader. It looks the part already, although needs more detailing, stickers etc: I plan on using this to move large construction items eg concrete pipes, tanks, generators, maybe steel beams etc - stuff that's too big/heavy to be moved with a telehandler 🙂
  14. Ah. I don't have either of those things. For the moment, I'll just pull the test train, with the DBSO at the back, but it would be nice to be able to turn the headlights off and push it.
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