RailPro > RailPro Specific Help & Discussion
Setting up Speed Table -- help needed.
Dean:
Answered my own question. The speed chart works while in RailPro mode! Cool. Now to see if it works in the lead engine of a consist. Probably will as the other settings are relayed to the following engines. :D
MtRR75:
Pardon my long absence on this thread. Between family issues and two other hobbies, I don’t get a lot of train time. I spent the most of my recent train time trying to understand how the RailPro speed table could help with the chuff rate adjustment. I think have finally figured it out.
I have set up the Speed Table for one of my locomotives. Now the synchronization of the chuff sounds to the driver revolutions is MUCH BETTER. However, it is still not perfect, especially in the slowest speeds. This might be due in part to the fact that my loco is an older one with a lot of inertia. (It does have a new motor in it.)
I don’t have time right now to set up my other locomotives. I have spelled out what I learned so far and how I set up the Speed Table in a PDF file that I posted in the RailPro Users Guides section.
https://rpug.pdc.ca/index.php/topic,634.0.html
JRad:
First, I know this is a very old thread. If the mods think it should be moved I'm OK with that, but thought it fit here for continuity.
Thanks for the speed table document. I spent some time last night playing with this. Before I comment / ask questions here is some background: I run Fn3 (large) scale narrow gauge. Mostly steam, some small early switcher diesels. Top speed on these locos is about 25MPH. I am in the early stages of converting to RailPro.
First, I noted that your document suggested that the Start and Top Speeds be set first so they would properly be represented on the speed table. I noted in my testing, that the throttle setting for a slower speed, lets say 5MPH would require 10% throttle after the Start Speed had been set (4.5% in my case), but that same 5MPH would require about 15% without the Start Speed being set first. I understand that this is because RailPro re-assigns 0-100% of throttle to the difference between start and top speeds of actual speed controller.
With the above in mind, I suspected that entries in the speed table are relative to actual controller percentage, not the throttle percentage after Start and Top speeds are set. I decided to make a note of the Start and Top speeds, but set them back to 0% and 100% before running my speed tests. I then reset the Start and Top speeds to their former settings before entering my test results into the table.
I'm sure with mainline locomotives the difference would be minimal, but the test results with my locomotives vary significantly at speeds below 20MPH. At 20MPH and above the difference was insignificant. If you generally run your locomotives above 15MPH, my findings would make little difference.
Now, my problem. Since my locomotive's top speed is 25MPH which is achieved at 90% throttle my table is a very steep curve. In fact, it''s so steep that I can't enter the actual throttle percentage for 20 and 25MPH because the slider at those speeds won't go high enough! So perhaps, the fact that the horizontal scale was not labeled in MPH might indicate that it does not have to be 0 to 100MPH.
Because the curve is so steep, the throttle becomes a bit touchy. Much more responsive than at the default curve, but I think I am forcing the loss of resolution. My goal was to improve chuff sync, which I haven't tested enough to say if I have.
I'm wondering what would happen if instead of MPH, I interpreted the horizontal scale as percent of top speed? That would allow a much shallower curve, but I don't know how this would effect the chuff sync. Thoughts?
A note on speed testing. Since I run point-to-point, with no circle, I opted to build a speedometer car from a cheap bike computer. When I was reading the Speed Table Guide it took me some time to realize you just kept running the loco around the circle and timed it each time it traversed the circuit. Leaving the loco running while popping into the speed table had me scratching my head. My loco would reach EOT and crash before I got back to the throttle page!
Highball-HeavyMountain:
Thanks for this JRad, I’m new to railpro as well. Just got mine installed on Christmas Eve and too noticed the chuff rates were not syncing.
I’m running mostly 1:22.5 but still staying in the narrow gauge theme.
Will be watching this one closely.
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