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Michaelaface

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    Guitaring, Singing, Recording Music, Model Railways, Steam Locomotives

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  1. I’ve now sent this loco back to Hornby 3 times and they’re now telling me that there are no issues with the loco… absolutely useless company
  2. I think I might have some of these knocking about already will give them a go, thanks!
  3. this is really frustrating as I really liked their products
  4. I can only find flat bottom joiners on their page, am I being blind?
  5. Hi all, I've had a search around and can't find a definite answer, but does anyone have a solution to isolating sections of peco bullhead track? in my case I do this for DCC automation purposes, but I'm not satisfied with the methods I've come up with so far I've tried 1) modifying code 75 insulating joiners so they're the right length, but these can fall of the track very easily, and are very poor at keeping the rails aligned 2) supergluing the rails to the chairs in the area I want to break the rail and dremmeling through the rail (3/4 chairs either side of the rail cut) I absolutely hate doing this but its more reliable than the first method is there are product I've missed that can solve this, or is there a better way of doing this that I've missed
  6. That's how I discovered the problem, the flanges on the driving wheels clip each other as they rotate, which also causes them to catch on various detail parts to the point where the loco would stall they said they replaced the wheel set on the last return, which makes me think its not the wheel set that's the issue, and sadly I don't think I need a back to back gauge to confirm that I don't think I can at this point, got the loco via amazon (first mistake) and they say its too late to return now, which is why I tried to get it repaired via Hornby instead I'll give this a shot and see what happens
  7. So I’ve just had this loco back from Hornby for the second time and it still runs exactly the same, am I missing something or are they just not fixing my loco?
  8. Hi all, I have an issue with my Hornby City of Salford R3856 and I was wondering if anyone on here can help me diagnose and solve the problem the loco arrived with multiple issues and its already been sent back and returned from Hornby, but still has, at least that seem to me, fairly severe mechanical problems, where the front two driving wheels move so much that they catch on each other when running, thus creating a significant wobble and poor slow running here is a video that hopefully should show exactly what I mean thanks Michaela
  9. unfortunately for a variety of reasons everything on this current layout is fixed in place, otherwise that'd be an ideal solution here's what I've gone for in the end, this was a test but the 45 degree angle works quite nicely, so I'll be repeating it around the layout
  10. for reference here's how everything is currently set up, forgive the mess in the middle of rebuilding and just reached the wiring stage a lot of it was improvised with whatever was on hand just to get things going, but the more I operate the layout the less happy I am with it all, also I've tried mounting things under the baseboards and I find that an absolute pain to wire up
  11. thank you for all the input! keeping wires to the minimum has always been preferred way of doing things, maybe too much of a minimum sometimes another fairly daft sounding question but how do you all go about mounting these components? screwed to the bottom of baseboard? bespoke cabinets? looking for inspiration in how to go about things here
  12. so basically, leave as is and I just need to rethink how I've placed them
  13. This may be a bit of a dumb question, but just looking for thoughts and advice on where to put all the DCC components on my layout (command station, block detection, accessory decoders, etc) as it stands, I have my command station next to the fiddle yard, as it has the largest amount of dropper wires for power, and I try to keep all the other components the shortest distance from where they are relevant, so I have 3 boards around the layout next to each junction with a DCC concepts ads-8fx for points and a digikeijs 4088 for block detection, and anything else that section, everything works fine, but I am getting a little irritated with the wiring getting a little busy, and having these boards all over the place, and accessibility is hindered at times, with it being awkward to check things, or these control boards getting in the way now I've noticed that on a lot of larger DCC layouts (my layout is 3.5m by 3.5m roundy) all the DCC equipment seems to be in one place (server cabinet style kinda thing), so basically I was wondering whats the best way to go about wiring everything, so it still functions properly, but with neatness and accessibility as the key Should I move all the components into one place, or will the distance of the wires, to point motors etc, become too long and affect performance
  14. hello, n00b question here, and I think I already know the answer but to install sounds on an ESU decoder do I need the ESU lokprogrammer hardware? or is it possible to use my DR5000 I only ask because there are sounds I'd like in some of my H0 locos, and I cannot find those sounds for sale preinstalled on decoders anywhere, but I can find the sound files available for free online from ESU failing that, anyone know where I can get a DCC sound decoder for a Railjet/RH1116 locomotive?
  15. Fitted a stay alive to this loco and it now runs perfectly! are there any issues I should look out for now there is a stay alive installed? avoiding shorts at all costs?
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