The performance issue is something Kevin may be able to shed light upon with his battery deal.
Here's what I've noticed so far with a battery:
1.) The top speed is a bit lower, but that is no big deal for me....like others I lower the top speed on all my locomotives to somewhere between 60-70%. That leaves me plenty of room to play with it, but since this locomotive and it's sister unit will be running locals and switching industries, I really don't want them to go fast.
2.) Start voltage is affected. I had to up the start voltage in order to get the locomotive moving.
3.) Pulse width modulation is affected. I couldn't put my finger on it while testing my rig, but Alan identified it. I noticed the locomotive wasn't starting as smoothly as it did before and would require a bit more "umph" to get it rolling (you can see this in the video). Once moving, it will glide along as slowly as I want. But getting everything moving initially takes a bit more power. It has to be that the motor is only given 12V instead of the normal 14.8V, and this doesn't quite overcome the friction of a static locomotive as easily as 14.8V does.
I run on a friend's DCC layout periodically and for whatever reason he has his Digitrax set up to give something like 16-17V to the rails. I'm at the upper end of Railpro's safety net when I run there (constantly getting a overvoltage warning). The locomotives take off immediately upon minimal throttle, whereas on my own rails they crawl along smoothly.
-Kevin