To me, it was obvious that DCC would be the natural choice for an automatically controlled railway. It allows everything to happen through the same interface. When I started thinking about this, the DCC decoders were almost the same cost as a loco and too big for most "N" gauge stock. I took a leap of faith, and developed the CML Electronics range of products before coming back to the railway. In the intervening 5 or so years, both problems have gone away.

The differences between the various DCC systems don't really show up when looking at the simple point-of-sale brochures. All will allow several trains to be driven; most are greatly expandable. Key issues to look at for larger railways are:

Answers to some of these questions can be hard to find. Let's address them in turn:

If there is a single bit of advice here: write down what you want, and choose a system that delivers it. Don't choose just the throttle and worry about the rest later!

Ultimately, the selection criteria led me to the Digitrax system. It had all of the features that I wanted, and I judged it to be more expandable than the others. Having made that decision, selecting a "Chief" system was obvious: the "Empire Builder" is a poor second, with programming on the "main" track output only. (The newer "Zephyr" entry level system is a good system, but wasn't available when I started; I may well have begun with that if it had been there).

Was this the right decision? Well, as at today there are prettier command stations, but they all do the same thing. Only the CML Electronics products do what I wanted by way of panel control and signal control. That's good enough for me.