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Hi Ryan.I don't have one of these, but from reading the description on Mark's site it sounds like the problem was with the design of the motor-to-lightboard contacts (since they ended up with the 5-pole Mashima but different contact strips to cure the problem in the final design). So what I would do is hard-wire a decoder, and make sure that you wrap where the wires get soldered to the motor brushes with kapton or electrical tape to prevent them from contacting the frame. From the photos the site, it looks to me like the easiest hard-wire solution would be to cut the lightboard into two pieces, keeping the front piece for the front headlight and for the decoder power pickup (you'd solder the red/black wires to the power traces on the front piece of the board). You might also be able to cut it in THREE pieces and salvage the rear piece, too, for the rear light and redundant power pickup, and place the decoder in the middle between the two or underneath the rear light board piece where the notch in the frame is. There looks to be plenty of space in either spot for an ESU LokPilot Micro or Zimo MX621, which would be my first choices for hard-wiring (but I suspect any tiny decoder, like the Digitrax DZ series or TCS Z2 would work). A TCS CN might work, but you'd almost certainly have to lengthen the wires between the pieces, and I don't know if they would fit on this frame in the pickup notches. You could certainly test fit it, though - if the pieces fit in the pickup notches, there is no reason why the TCS CN shouldn't work in this application with some wire lengthening. But I'd probably do this by cutting the lightboard.This really shouldn't be all that hard. If you've installed hard-wired decoders before, I'd say you could do this in an hour.John C.
Just to add to jdcolombo's idea. If you go here:http://n-scale-dcc.blogspot.ca/search/label/Loco%3A%20Athearn%20F59PHIthere are instructions for installation of the above mentioned decoders (or similar) in the F59PHI using either the original Athearn board or modifying an Atlas GP 40 board (?). I don't know how similar the F59 board is to the one in your SD70I. I suspect it may be similar in design and pattern.Good reference website, nonetheless, and there are ingenious work-arounds. Perhaps if you check the other installs on this site, you may find an alternative method or idea to solve your particular situation.Adapt. Modify. Overcome.Hope this helps....