On Monday I was going through my list of tests for the layout prior to the Ops Session. After adding a power jumper in Grafton Yard between two tracks, I tested two locos which ran well on the test track, but had some issues on the layout. I am thinking that I need a snubber added to my return loops at Grafton Yard to clean up the signal and this might help these two locos on the layout. I did some checking on three trains to ensure that their wagons were in the correct order so the operators had a smooth run on the weekend. They basically were all OK. However, I could not find the timetable cards for one of the trains, No. 11 and its return No. 12. The North Coast Control list had those timetable cards in it, but the main layout timetable card box was missing both these trains. I remember that this train may not have run in the last iteration of the timetable. The shunt lists for both trains was also missing from the shunt list box on the layout fascia, but again a copy was in the North Coast Control Box. Maybe the cards were missing at the last session. So it appears that I must have removed the cards in the distant past to do something, and I did not return the cards back to their rightful place. Whoops! So I printed a new copy. I also did a small run of NL1 (the Brisbane Limited) out of Grafton Yard and I found out that the express goods wagon and the railmotor wagon were at the wrong end of the train. That was my fault, as I can remember that I supervised the return of this train in the past session, I must have told the driver to do something wrong. So I shunted these two wagons back to the front of the train, and parked that train back up in Grafton Yard.
So I printed up the two missing Timetable cards, and the two missing shunt lists. I inserted them into the correct position in the timetable sequence and noticed that another card seemed to be missing. As I was going back upstairs and sitting down in the office to print the missing timetable card, I noticed buried under my multimeter, some timetable cards. Wouldn’t you know it. Cards for No. 11 and 12 were found along with the shunt lists. Underneath them were 4 more timetable cards. One was the missing one I was about to print. So an audit was undertaken so see if there are anymore missing. All four of these cards were missing from the shed. I found another 6 cards on my desk. But these existed in the shed, as I reprinted new cards for the last session.
On Tuesday about 9 of us met at Cliff’s place for our fortnightly gathering. It was another good night of great discussion.
On Wednesday after the boss left, I got my track plans out along with paper and track and continued on the design process. I had read during the week in the AMRM magazine that a NSW Railway Club had 900mm wide modules and I think 2400mm long. So I took a step back to see if that was possible on my potential layout.
I went down to the shed and tested the headsets and the phone system on Friday morning. Headsets were all OK, but the phone between the main layout yards and North Coast Control did not work at the Grafton Yard/Acacia Ridge Yard end. I pulled the control box apart and found a couple of broken solder joints. So these were fixed and all was good again. I then added some lettering to the control boxes and the phones, advising how to use them. I then decided to give my Signal Panel a test before I released it for the Saturday crew and I found out that a few panel switches were not working. I traced it back to two wires that had come loose from opening and closing the panel. So they were also fixed. I then noticed that two signals on the Branch B1 and B3 were playing up. It took me a while but I dabbled with the Arduino code and got everything working again. It has me perplexed, as I thought that I had tested the Branch logic and had everything working properly. Anyway, it is all good now.
When Saturday dawned, I took the signal panel outside into the pergola for the guys to view later in the arvo, and with all the ambient infrared light from the sun, every IR detector lit up. That was a real bummer. So it could not be used. Anyway at a few minutes before the appointed kick off time of the Operations Session, I turned on track power and I had a short on Power District 4. That means I had an issue somewhere between Cougal Spiral and the far end of Acacia Ridge Yard. Acacia Ridge Yard includes the auto reversing section of 4 tracks for trains that terminate there and return south to Grafton Yard. I was stumped. I could hear the auto reverser in that section chattering away, but it did not click. I could not find a loco sitting over a set of points – which is the usual cause of a short. It took me about 30 minutes, but the steel train that sits on one of the reversing tracks had a wheel of its last wagon sitting directly over the joint that is the boundary of the reversing section. It bridged the isolated section with the wheel across both sections. I moved the wagon 1cm and the short was removed. What a waste of 30 minutes! I had moved that train only on Monday when I tested each loco. I guess I did that and then shut the layout down.
Anyway the Ops Session brought back some memories. I was going to increase the output voltage from my NCE 5 Amp DCC system after the previous Ops Session, but I never got around to it. Trains run very slowly in the Grafton Yard district. It had the lowest track voltage output of any of the power districts. During the session 8047 and 4848 on the steel train ended up being a total failure. It turned up that 4848 while originally running, was eventually failed for being dragged around by 8047. Then 8047 developed a straight short within power district 4, but it took us a minute to work out that this loco was causing the short. So we removed those two locos and replaced them with a 44 class and that train got going again. Apart from that we had a few trains separate, but once we got started most things worked. Loco 44236 had working lights and sound but could not or would not move in Grafton Yard. So we replaced that loco as its train prepared to get under way, i.e. the operator talking to Control and awaiting line clear to take the staff for the section Grafton Yard to Rappville Loop. I took 44236 to the programming track, ran it on DC and it sprung into life. I have no idea what caused it. So we quickly swapped 44236 back onto the train, as the train was still within Grafton Yard just about to leave. We had problems with the tracks into Acacia Ridge Yard not consistently providing power to the frogs of the points. I will clean all the points this week. Anyway we ran 16 trains with our reduced crew complement. The main reason for today’s session was to give Darren 2 hours as Dispatcher on the layout, to complete his 10 hour requirement to help finalise his Dispatcher AP. We ran for 2 and a half hours. It would have been 3 if not for the initial short. Also with most of the guys having fun in Bundaberg at their train show, those left back in Brisbane wanted to have fun as well. So we scheduled this rival session.
Today I went down to the shed and bit the bullet and wound the power output from the NCE 5 Amp dcc system to 16V. Because I provide two levels of current measuring on the layout , the actual voltage at the rail is much less. The first stage is the complete layout current draw and the second is current draw by Power District. These two processes reduce the layout power. I’ am now getting between 14 and 14.5V to the track in each power district. Now that this change has occurred, I went to the point motor that was controlling the standard gauge point at Dutton Park that directs trains to either South Brisbane Interstate, or Fisherman Islands Yard. This point was only operating in one direction, so had to be manually reset back the other way by a signal crew after a train goes to Fisherman Islands. It had been on my ‘To Do’ list for many months to adjust this point. I was planning on increasing the capacitance on one output of the NCE point motor controller, but never got around to it. Alternatively I could adjust the alignment of the point motor to the point. However, after testing today after increasing the layout track voltage, that point now works. I give up!
While on my Mr Fix-It run today, I re-soldered a wire in the Glenapp to The Risk staff machine power supply as this went out late in the session. I noticed while shunting some trains in Grafton Yard that a KD spring had caused a Steel Slab Tilt wagon to uncouple from its brother. I added the KD spring and that was now working. I looked at 4848 which had stopped running. I opened it up and the wire had come off the Powerline 48’s motor. That was quickly fixed and 4848 was working again. 8047 was another issue. I put it on the track and got a direct short. I took off the shell. Nothing obvious. I put it on my DC test track and it sprang into life. It then ran on DCC again. I put it back on the layout and it was running. I give up Again! So I moved these back onto the steel train that was sitting on Grafton Yard. I checked the timetable card box and worked out that two timetable cards were in the wrong timetable sequence order. I had their sequence numbers wrong. So I fixed them up in the EXCEL Spreadsheet that is my timetable. So I am now ready for the next Ops Session. Maybe I will have the next session on the Sunday of the Sydney RPM weekend for those staying in Brisbane. Oh to be a disrupter!












