mikezang Posted October 11, 2013 Posted October 11, 2013 I am planning a project that will be a layout as below, but when I check the electric, td2.0 program told me this layout has a short circuit, I am not sure if this is correct, can you check it for me? Quote
robt Posted October 11, 2013 Posted October 11, 2013 There's an error in the circuit layout created by the program. You can see it in straight tracks between two switches below. I see no short circuits here. Quote
mikezang Posted October 11, 2013 Author Posted October 11, 2013 There's an error in the circuit layout created by the program. You can see it in straight tracks between two switches below. I see no short circuits here. So I can just use a regular controller connect to this layout without any modification ? Quote
robt Posted October 11, 2013 Posted October 11, 2013 So I can just use a regular controller connect to this layout without any modification ? I'm not an expert on electrified tracks, but I think the layout is correct and you can use a regular controller. Let's wait for an answer from an expert. Quote
Pet-Lego Posted October 11, 2013 Posted October 11, 2013 Looks fine to me, should work fine with a regular controller. Quote
Freddie Posted October 11, 2013 Posted October 11, 2013 No short circuits there; just a bug in the program that displays the polarity incorrectly. Quote
codefox421 Posted October 11, 2013 Posted October 11, 2013 I am planning a project that will be a layout as below, but when I check the electric, td2.0 program told me this layout has a short circuit, I am not sure if this is correct, can you check it for me? Looking closely at the bottom-most section of straights in the top image, it looks like there are 6 straight tracks when there should be only 4. The extra two are overlaying the switch tracks and could be causing the software bug. Electrically, I see nothing wrong here. Quote
mikezang Posted October 12, 2013 Author Posted October 12, 2013 Looking closely at the bottom-most section of straights in the top image, it looks like there are 6 straight tracks when there should be only 4. The extra two are overlaying the switch tracks and could be causing the software bug. Electrically, I see nothing wrong here. Great! you fund a bug in my layout, I just modified it, not it is ok as below: Quote
LEGO Train 12 Volts Posted October 12, 2013 Posted October 12, 2013 It's a software bug ...the layout is ok! Quote
zephyr1934 Posted October 15, 2013 Posted October 15, 2013 Although it sounds like this problem is solved, the lego train controllers are pretty robust. Whenever you hook up a controller for the first time, keep an eye on it. If there is a short, the green light should dim as soon as you put power on and no motors will move. Cut power quickly and there is little chance you'll do any harm. Quote
mikezang Posted October 15, 2013 Author Posted October 15, 2013 Although it sounds like this problem is solved, the lego train controllers are pretty robust. Whenever you hook up a controller for the first time, keep an eye on it. If there is a short, the green light should dim as soon as you put power on and no motors will move. Cut power quickly and there is little chance you'll do any harm. Thanks for your advise . Quote
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