Gary,
QUOTE (Gary @ 24 Nov 2006, 00:35)
<{POST_SNAPBACK}>Common sense suggests that Budget systems are not fully featured. It does not require an experienced DCCer to tell us that! What I object to is experienced DCCers who say we must get a fully featured system for £££ from the outset or else we are wasting our money as we will inevitably trade up and so on and so forth. All this does is serve to confuse and put wanabee DCCers off DCC.
I think you should read what I and others have written before firing back unsubstantiated statements.
It seems to me that you have purchased an entry-level budget system which evidently (and rightly so) meets your needs. However, having now commented on it in this forum and seen feedback from others, it appears that you are begining to realise that it wasn't such a sensible purchase afterall. What we are now seeing in this thread appears to be an exercise in defending your decision.
Look, my view is that people should buy the system which is most appropriate for their needs and budget.
Personally, I chose the Lenz 100 system for the following (among many) reasons:
- The NMRA standards are based on it, so compatibility wouldn't be an issue
- Because the NMRA standards are based on Lenz, Lenz was unlikely to become obsolete quickly
- It uses 4 digit addressing which means that it is compatible with all my friends who use 4 digit systems and we can interswap locos between our layouts without a problem
- I personally prefer to support European products
In retrospect, I believe I made a good choice, but given the same situation again, I would seriously consider NCE as well.
As others have said, LocMaus and Gaugemaster Prodigy represent very good starter systems in comparison to Select.
QUOTE Experienced DCCers are absolutely hopeless salesmen I'm afraid and its no wonder we are still in the dinosuar age in the UK with they way they go about trying to explain things. There are examples within this very topic!
It isn't a salesman issue at all! Unfortunately, some people won't listen to advice.
QUOTE Why cannot DCCers simply suggest that railway modellers spend £50 and try out the DCC experience. If they don't like it then they have only lost £50 less whatever they get for their system on eBay. If they do like it then they take it a stage further. This to me is so blindingly obvious but not to DCCers apparently!
Why take this approach at all ?
I did my research, looked at all the products and features available and then made my choice. I decided that having seen friend's DCC layouts that if this was an investment I was going to make then it was going to be a one way thing from the start. I went into it having done all my research with my eyes open. There was going to be no going back. I knew what I was getting for my money and decided that cheapo entry systems were not the way forward as I was going to be serious about this.
The 'toe dip' approach is nearly always a false economy. Why buy two systems when you can buy a decent one in the first place, especially when the first system which is the one you promote is a cul-de-sac system which is going to make the cost of upgrading even more costly when one has to replace everything ?
QUOTE If you DCCer lot got your act together then the whole of Britain could be DCC in 5 years. But if you continue to perform as you have done to date there is absolutely no chance.
As an ex-pat Brit, I will say that while the above may be true, Britiain suffers very badly from the not-invented-here syndrome and resistance to change! That is why DCC hasn't taken off over there yet.
QUOTE My DCC experiance is that I am a busy person wanting to set a layout up, plug in a console, put a few locos on the track, and have a bit of fun. I have absolutely no interest in the technology and how it works. As long as it does what I want it to do then I am very happy. From this perspective I have had 100% success to date with both the el cheapo Bachmann and Hornby systems and they are all I am ever likely to need.
I think if we re-translate this, it means no experience at all beyond Select.
QUOTE When I observe how they have to faff about at Warley MRC with a high spec systems from a well know supplier and all the associated wiring and wiring plans and short circuits and blow outs and cut outs and so on and so forth then I am absolutely glad that I stick with the simple stuff with no wiring!
Short circuits, blow-outs, cut-outs etc are all symptomatic of people who haven't wired their layouts properly and sadly, in a lot of cases, these people don't want to know how to do it properly. None of this is unique to DCC layouts - it is very common on DC layouts as well.
If people wired their layouts properly for DC (which many do not), they wouldn't have a problem converting to DCC. I didn't.
QUOTE OK. From a DCCers perspective Hornby (and Bachmann?) customers may be fools, idiots, bufoons, representative of neanderthal man or whatever however at least we know how to have fun!
Believe it or not, us 'DCCers' probably have more fun because we have systems which have features which enhance the enjoyment of operating our layouts.
My personal opinion is that some of the latest entry-level systems are likely to have the opposite of the desired effect on DCC as a system for operating layouts. Those of us who took the time to do our research are quite happy, but those who just jump in will probably be very disillusioned by the limitations of entry level systems and may well abandon DCC as 'not worth it'. Now that would be very sad.
Graham Plowman