But then I began to hear reports about a revolutionary way of controlling model trains: Digital Command Control or DCC.
With DCC, there is, inside the body of the locomotive a little computer chip which receives instructions from the controller's handset eg forwards/reverse/faster/slower. Also, instructions to turn on lights or make engine sounds can be transmitted from the handset to the computer chip.
Initially I rejected the idea of DCC with the same prejudice with which I'd originally rejected the idea of owning a mobile phone or a using word-processor or a PC or indeed writing a blog. But, it seemed that DCC was the way to go. Unfortunately, there was a problem.
The DCC Bible. |
The problem was that I had already purchased non-DCC locomotives.
To adopt DCC would involve me in taking apart the locomotives and trying to install a teeny silicone chip in each of them. Crikey, I'd have to re-train as a technician in order to fit and solder these chips into the locomotives. We're talking months of intricate work here. At the moment I'm not convinced that I have the skills to open up the models in the first place and still be able to put them back together correctly, let alone doing anything with a soldering iron once inside them. Anyway, I have purchased the DCC Bible.
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