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As a software engineer I should have know better. Once Yeovil Town had been fitted with DCC Accessory Decoders and CDUs we could not only operate each point from a common ZTC 511 (Sort of signal...
/blog/yeovil-town/829.htm
Yeovil Town has seen some impressive demonstration running due to an extra memory chip being added to the ZTC 511. We now have 46 preset routes which work amazingly well. A
loco can be tak...
/blog/yeovil-town/855.htm
It has finally happened. Yeovil Town today had it's first session with computer control. We have much work to do on splitting the layout up into blocks but at the mo just operating points and ru...
/blog/yeovil-town/computer-control.htm
When using block control on your layout or when using any other type of train on track indicator, then the most popular technology to use is where the sensor looks for a small current passing through ...
/computer-control/resistor-wheel-sets.htm
My prize
locomotive (A sound enabled EWS livery Class 66) and it's sister class 66 (no sound) both failed recently so no impresive long trains to test Yeovil Town.
One was dead and would not respond ...
/blog/yeovil-town/3259.htm
Yes, after buying a heavily weathered tank
loco and several other secondhand ones we are about to embark on a dirty campaign - Weathering them to look like those quite dirty tanks in all the photos.
...
/blog/yeovil-town/3261.htm
Ok, so Yeovil Town did not quite work correctly last night...
We got someone to clean the track and they were a bit too enthusiastic and the track cleaner was not up to the job so we ended up with li...
/blog/yeovil-town/791.htm
When you don't have the correct devices to convert a DCC accessory decoder for use with slow motion point motors then you resort to using a bunch of resistors (who has 2 watt resistors hanging around?...
/blog/yeovil-town/1134.htm