Thats potentially reassuring, thanks, Simon.Any NMRA compliant decoder should work on any NMRA compliant system, (that’s pretty much all of them) though of course it needs to be capable of handling the motor stall current without damage.
Penny drops!a common wire to the rails at the nose, which is changed +/- by the switch.


Yes, in fairness the PMV instructions advise using resistance soldering, which I didn't, although most of my problems were solved once I started using phosphoric acid flux. The main problems were that the sides buckled when attaching the vertical framing, and if I was doing them again I would consider first soldering strips of metal angle to the inside faces as strengthener. New techniques may render such elaborate etched kits obsolete, but as you say, they look right, and it's hard to beat the crisp edges of metal framework. There are other G1 versions which don't look right at all!Thing is, Andrew, they look Right
In particular, the wheels look right, in a way that G1MRA Standard' ones never can.As for drag, they damned-well ought to slow down on a curve like that!
I'm seriously considering guard-railing my 2m radius one, not so much to keep the stock on, as to signal, "Yes I know this curve is tight!"On the solder front, my attempt to design a totally plug-and-play Resistance Soldering Unit has hit further snags.
However a home-build RSU is still within reach for anyone who can wire a mains plug - a separate conversation of course.(There's no significant cost saving in making one's own - it just avoids queuing for a small-batch commercial one.)