Difference between revisions of "CV 138"

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tcs>Dan Mycio
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{{Infobox CV
 
{{Infobox CV
|cv name=Throttle Mode Selection
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|cv name=Brake Light Delay
|cv range=0-2
+
|cv range=0-255
|cv accepted=0-2
+
|cv accepted=0-255
|cv default=1 (Varies)
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|cv default=16
 
}}
 
}}
  
==NMRA CV 138 - Throttle Mode Selection==
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== CV 138 - Brake Light Off Delay ==
There are 3 different throttle modes in the WOWSound decoder to choose from, TCS offers [[{{NAMESPACE}}:CV_147#Traditional_Throttle_Mode|Traditional Throttle Mode]] (slot car mode), [[{{NAMESPACE}}:CV_147#Prototype_Mode|Prototype Mode]], and [[{{NAMESPACE}}:CV_147#Manual_Notching|Manual Notching]]. Each mode offers different levels of control and prototype authenticity. The WOWDiesel decoder defaults to Prototype Throttle mode which gives the most prototypical performance by taking advantage of TCS's revolutionary Proto-Notch™ technology.<br>
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CV 138 is used to adjust how long the "Brake Lights" [[Lighting Effects|Lighting Effect]] remain on after applying the brakes and coming to a stop. This CV can be adjusted for how long the brake lights will remain after the brakes are no longer being applied to slow or stop the train. The higher the number, the longer the lights will remain on (up to 13 seconds). The lower the number the less time they will remain on (down to instantly turning off or going dim if configured in [[CV 61]]).
<br>
 
The easy way to select a throttle mode is to use menu 4.1 of [[{{NAMESPACE}}:Audio_Assist™|Audio Assist™]].<br>
 
Additionally this CV can be manually programmed by entering the value of the desired throttle mode into CV147
 
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
 
|-
 
! scope="col" |Throttle Mode
 
! scope="col" |Value
 
|-
 
! scope="row" |Traditional Throttle mode
 
|0
 
|-
 
|-
 
! scope="row" |Prototype Throttle Mode
 
|1
 
|-
 
|-
 
! scope="row" |Manual Notching Mode
 
|2
 
|-
 
|}
 
  
===Traditional Throttle Mode===
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The Brake Lights lighting feature operates much like the brake lights on a car. When the locomotive decelerates the brake lights will remain on until:
{{{{NAMESPACE}}:Traditional_Throttle_Mode}}
 
  
===Prototype Mode===
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# The locomotive levels out its speed.
{{{{NAMESPACE}}:Auto_Notching}}
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# The locomotive comes to a complete stop.
 +
# The locomotive begins accelerating.
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# The brakes are released.
  
===Manual Notching===
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Once any of these conditions are met, the delay timer will start. Once the timer expires, the brake lights will go off, or go dim if configured in [[CV 61]].
{{{{NAMESPACE}}:Manual_Notching}}
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 +
'''Related:'''
 +
 
 +
* [[Lighting Effects]]
 +
* [[Train Brake]]
 +
* [[CV 139|Brake Button]]
  
 
[[Category:Standard CV]]
 
[[Category:Standard CV]]
 +
[[Category:Lights]]

Latest revision as of 18:54, 4 November 2022

CV 138
Brake Light Delay
Range of Values0-255
Accepted Values0-255
Default Value16

CV 138 - Brake Light Off Delay

CV 138 is used to adjust how long the "Brake Lights" Lighting Effect remain on after applying the brakes and coming to a stop. This CV can be adjusted for how long the brake lights will remain after the brakes are no longer being applied to slow or stop the train. The higher the number, the longer the lights will remain on (up to 13 seconds). The lower the number the less time they will remain on (down to instantly turning off or going dim if configured in CV 61).

The Brake Lights lighting feature operates much like the brake lights on a car. When the locomotive decelerates the brake lights will remain on until:

  1. The locomotive levels out its speed.
  2. The locomotive comes to a complete stop.
  3. The locomotive begins accelerating.
  4. The brakes are released.

Once any of these conditions are met, the delay timer will start. Once the timer expires, the brake lights will go off, or go dim if configured in CV 61.

Related: