RailPro > RailPro Specific Help & Discussion
Proto 2000 BL2 install
llxlocomotives:
I agree with K-PACK, totally remove the electronic board. The function it was designed for is not needed with the rail pro module. It yields a voltage loss as well as the other unwanted control. I find that this type board can severely impact the motor performance. The
Simplicity of DCC ready usually leads to problematic results when the digital module is put in place. Best work with a clean circuit.
Larry
www.llxlocomotives.com
ON28:
Since I disassembled the loco to clean the gears, I'll hardwire. I will say that I installed RailPro in my DCC-ready Atlas Geep and it runs perfectly.
KPack:
--- Quote from: ON28 on September 27, 2019, 04:07:28 PM ---Since I disassembled the loco to clean the gears, I'll hardwire. I will say that I installed RailPro in my DCC-ready Atlas Geep and it runs perfectly.
--- End quote ---
I have one locomotive that I installed Railpro into a DCC-ready plug, just to see how it worked, and it works great (Athearn Genesis). However, I can't stand how much space the factory board takes up. I really like having room to breathe under the shell. Removing the factory board and hardwiring allows me to have a cleaner install and far more flexibility on where things are placed. No factory board means I can place speakers where I want them, keep wiring tight and tidy, and leave room for keep alive installation.
drisdon:
I too do what Kpack recommends, primarily because that is what he advised when I started installing the modules, and removing the factory board defintely frees up space for the module, speaker, and keep alive and wiring isn't all that difficult. Besides if you're going to change the lighting to LEDs anyways you might as well make it all correct.
Dan Risdon
ON28:
My install was straightforward. I disassembled the loco, cleaned all drive train parts after soaking in Dawn dish soap, filed any burrs from the gears, and replaced the cracked (and uncracked) axle gears with Athearn parts (which were a tight fit). I also cleaned the commutator with 91% IPA and a pencil eraser and cleaned out the slots on the commutator with a hobby knife. The brass worm gears were also cleaned with a hobby knife. The factory wheelsets were checked under magnification and thoroughly cleaned; you'd be surprised what dirt shows up under the Magni-Visor, including the truck pivot on the bolsters. The frame was also eyed for warping. I reassembled the loco, testing each truck for free rolling, then adding a few drops of plastic-compatible oil at the gear posts and light plastic-compatible grease to the gears themselves. I applied drops of Conducta-Lube wherever there is mechanical electrical contact, including on the truck bearings. I tested the motor out of the chassis, insulating the bottom contact from the chassis with masking tape. I removed the lightboard per the original Life-Like instructions, and plugged the LM into the factory 8-pin plug. It ran, but needed a few thrust washers around the rear worm to remove slop in the drive and quiet the gears. I also added masking tape where the shell touches the chassis, to further reduce noise. (There isn't any additional weight besides the chassis, so the shell acts like an echo chamber.) I ran it for a half-hour in both directions to seat the gears; it drew 630 mA on the current test compared to the 360 mA or so on my Atlas/Kato drives. No lights or sound at this time. I MUed it with an Atlas GP-7, but that's another story.
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