Hi Niel, thank you for your response.
As you say, the AR1 is generally very easy to use. The AR1 would not trip when a test locomotive was run slowly around the loop. The loco in question was a run-in Farish small bo-bo diesel. It would trip albeit with a short being detected when run at higher speed with the lights turned on, therefore needing to draw a higher current. This same locomotive worked on another layout using an AR1 with the AR1's TTC potentiometer remaining set at the as supplied mid point.
The reverse loop was isolated at both ends with insulated joiners to give the required "double gap".
The longest train fitted into the reverse loop.
The TTC was set to the minimum setting (as per the set up instructions)
Initially feeds to the track inside the loop were by wires soldered to the underneath of fish plates. I was using Peco 1st radius set track curves (N gauge) so about 180 mm from the gaps. Outside of the reverse loop one feed was on the end of another curve (so again about 180mm) whilst the other end was closer, about 50 mm.
Initially the controller was not from Digitrax but after the trouble started I reverted to using a DCS51 (Zephyr as they used to be known). Its settings were as supplied brand new.
At the insistence of John I soldered two extra track feeds onto the reverse loop at each end "less than 50mm from the ends". This made absolutely no difference to the operation of the unit. Of coarse, the two curves which were so treated are now 'damaged'.
The unit has been returned. John has written that he tested the unit by substituting it in his layout (Big HO american outline) and that it worked perfectly. Because of this he says the unit is not defective. Perhaps he is right but it did not trip for my little diesel, possibly because the current draw was below the specified 0.25 Amps, or perhaps the unit needs more than that to work. In any event it did not work and neither John nor I know why because no electrical readings have been taken.
I am in the process of modifying the track layout to remove some of the compromises entered into for the purposes of getting the Hornby e-link system to operate. Whilst doing this I will wire the reverse loop to operate using an old fashioned DPDT. Whilst I regard this as a retrogressive step, it overcomes the inability to obtain a working reverse loop module here in South Africa.