No matter who you talk to “DCC Ready” can mean many things. Bachmann Spectrum EMD SD45 (in N scale) - is it or isn’t it? I contacted a ‘Power Seller’ recently - who professes to be an Authorised Bachmann Dealer - who had some very attractively priced Bachmann locos which were - quote - “DCC Ready”. What is your definition of “DCC Ready”? I asked him. He didn’t have the answer as 'he has to quote what Bachmann tells him! He did suggest, however, that I contacted Backmann’s forum to get the answer. Seems a strange way of doing business for an “Authorised Dealer”! Anybody got the answer?
I’ve purchased and otherwise acquired many ‘DCC Ready’ locos in the past few years. Some have a socket for a decoder to plug into, some have a soldered in board that must be removed for a decoder to be installed (I usually just splice and hardwire) while others had no improvements whatsoever oyher than the motor being isolated from the frame. Watch out for the term ‘DCC Capable’. In locos that carry this term you usually have to isolate the motor yourself. Athearn Blue Box is a good example of ‘DCC Capable’.
I will add to this by saying I have purchased a few Athearn that say DCC ready, but the motor is still not isolated. A plug for a decoder and a non isolated motor is a set up for a disaster.
Right you are. I always check to see that the motor is isolated properly. I’ve been doing my own conversions and installs in Athearn locos for at least two years now.
I’ve got a pre-Walthers Life-Like Proto engine that was marked DCC Ready, but the headlight was wired through the frame, and it had no socket.
The bottom line is that “DCC Ready” means whatever the manufacturer says it does, and nothing more.
A long time ago, when transistor technology was taking over from vacuum tubes, we used to laugh at the way “all solid state” was used. We found that term on a kitchen blender. Since “solid state” in its technical definition meant “no vacuum tubes,” the blender maker was completely right in saying that, although it really was pretty silly.
Does a Bachmann diesel made in 1976-77 count? That was a bear to convert as I had to remove part of the frame. Eventually I pitched the old open frame and shoehorned in a PPW can motor.
I’ve done several Bachmann Spectrum steam loco’s and just one Bachmann Specturm diesel, the 44 ton switcher.
The Steamers were easy. They had 8 pin plugs in the tenders. All I had to do was remove the factory installed plug and replace it with the 8 pin decoder.
However, on the 44 ton switcher I had to hard wire the decoder. The motor was isolated but I had to remove two metal things from the board that covered the holes that the decoder wires needed to be soldered to.
As everyone is saying, “DCC READY” can mean anything from the loco will accept a decoder as long as you isolate the motor and hard wire the decoder in, to, all that’s needed is to plug in the decoder and go.
Just make sure the motor is isolated before going any further.
“DCC Ready” means whatever the manufacturer wants it to mean. There’s no set formula from the NMRA or whoever that says requirement A, B and C have to be met before you can call it “DCC Ready”. It can mean anything from the engine having an eight-pin “plug and play” receptacle ready for a decoder to “we’re pretty sure there’s room in the engine to fit a decoder in there somewhere”. [:D]