On October 24 (page 9 of this long build thread), I reported that the SGS MFU I had installed and was using in the FAMO before going to Scotland inexplicably would not function at all upon my return. I tried various tricks about which you can read above if you are that patient and interested. Nothing worked. Because others had recommended and had success with this brand MFU for the FAMO with its coordinated ("mixed") steering, I order
another SGS MFU. (I live alone, so I can eat cheap.)
On January 10 (previous page), I reported that the second SGS MFU was exhibiting "some strange behavior. When I turn the steering servo, the sound quits, to start up readily with a slight touch on the throttle." That malfunction was occurring with the Smart Flex TX and RX I was using. Since I am relatively inexperience with RC electronics, I decided to test the MFU
and myself.
To test the MFU, I rebound the Smart Flex TX and RX, only to find the exact same malfunction. Then I bound my Flysky IA6X TX and FS IA6B RX and hooked these up to the SGS MFU. The same malfunction again.
To test myself, I tried my WCP Jeep, which I had set up to run with the Flysky TX. The Jeep ran fine. In fact, I fine tuned the steering servo center and throw and adjusted the throttle curve to get the best driving I could achieve.
Then I went back to the FAMO: not surprisingly, the same malfunction continued to occur and even worsened: when I turn the steering servo, the sound and the motors quit, while the light switch still functioned readily and the horn honked (sans engine sound). So I did a "factory reset."

Terminology is tricky: for the MTH DCS and Lionel Legacy train electronics I have used for years, a "factory reset" resets a specified train engine's various functions to the way they were set at the factory. On the Flysky TX, a "factory reset" resets the whole TX to out-of-the-box configuration, wiping out all the models names, settings---all of it: blooie! What I wanted was "model reset."

So I got even more practice as I again set up all the parameters for the Jeep. Yes, and I had more fun running the little Jeep around the modeling area.
I have now removed the SGS module from the FAMO, and soon I hope to have time to install and try to work on the original MFU that came with the FAMO from Asiatam. "Why," you might reasonably ask, "did you not do so months and months ago?" Well, others recommended the SGS module as being even better for the FAMO.