I had a day off work yesterday so spent it in the train room working on Polsarrett. The aim for the day was to end up with the layout being functional again.
First on the hit list was getting power back to the track. First off was removing the red wire link to the switch panel, it should be a black feed. The short that would have originally occurred didn't as the red wire wasn't actually attached! Then adding in the missing black wire from the controller output to the switch panel. Sounds easy but I was working under the board and really needed 3 hands.
Power was restored and all the section switches worked ok. An early success!
But... Powering up the layout revealed another issue. Somehow over the last 12 months the servos had all unadjusted themselves. It was almost like a gremlin had been along and moved all the mounts so they were in the wrong place. Blades were not closing and the actuator wires in some cases we're sticking quite proud of the tiebar. Weird.
Rather than address that straight away I decided to add the power feed to the fiddle yard. Took a while to work out where I had intended this to come from but got there in the end. Once done I decided to do some testing (why wouldn't you?)
Various items of motive power were tried up and down the line, some having not run for a while. Amazingly most ran well straight from the display cabinet. The worst was a new Adams Radial which seems to bounce and clunk over everything. I don't think I've time to sort it out for the first show.
The Beatty Well Tanks all ran nicely, which is a relief as they are core motive power for the layout. The Heljan 1366 also seemed happy but the droopy coupling snags on turnouts. Bless. one of my Dapol 22s had a run and ran beautifully, could end up being a fallback. Anyway, 2 hours later I had a good idea of the locos that would and wouldn't be going to the first show.
Task avoidance was completed, so attention turned to the servos. First off I released the mounts from the board to free up the blades. This enabled me to see if the problem was glue, ballast lumps or the servo settings. A mixture of all was the answer.
Once freed up the next job was to find better positions for the servo mounts, minor adjustments in most cases. I also remade a couple of the actuator wires as incomprehensibly they were too short. Reassembly is a job that ideally needs 2 sets of eyes and 17 hands, quite frustrating as you need to be above and below board.
Two hours in and two points sorted and reset on the Megapoints controller thingy. Two others quickly followed with minimal work but a fifth, well, suffice to say I have it to do this morning. The air was blue at one point.
The work session did end with me getting some 'help' from No1 daughter. She had a drive of the brake an special but did helpfully point out the carriages were all different colours and had no people in...