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so now I get to my point...I tell three and five apart by how they start relative to how they stop.5 usually starts close to the speed they stop3 usually ramps up to a happy speed.as you slow a 3 pole from the happy speedit will often sustain a slower speed and thenin unreliable speed range the MOTOR will cog.pulses and gears and flywheels will all add to the conga line.
pulses and gears and flywheels will all add to the conga line.
well,it would help in attempting to understand if you didn't add words.cog and conga line are not the same thing.well so much for the easy way.At times, I am not sure you listen to you.lets talk flywheels for a bit. you said "Once the the is overcome, the motor will speed up."I am assuming you meant "Once this is overcome, the motor will speed up."yup I agree as far as that goes, what you didn't say waswhich caused the jackrabbiting...the 3 pole or the massive flywheel.I tend to think the three pole....the other thing about flywheels is that they change the frequency or harmonicsin the motor/gears/drivers/train.If harmonics is just frequencies, changing one weight can be balanced out by a different weight.so it is possible under some bizzare stack of circumstances that a bigger flywheelmight somehow add to a percieved cog...however that ain't my claim, just pointing out a possibility.ever see a caboose bobbing at the end of a train?have you looked into why?at some loco speeds, I have seen it bob with enthusiasmand at other speeds, not really bobbing at all.there are a lot of ways to see what cogging does.in general, a biiiiig flywheel will hide cogging.as you pointed out, that solution may come with other problems.to repeatcog does not equal conga line.so the rest of the post with the pulsating geared conga lineis good? no comments for the rest?
you may want to keep editing peteski
I remember the 0-8-0.it was the challenger that had my curiosity.interesting. motor brushes can absorb oil you say.that I will note... I would think arching would burn it to carbon...and water and co2 and no2.... it has been a while since I have had a clogger..and that tid-bit o info may explain a lotthanks
my guess is that the oil does get burnt... some anyway and the rest gets spread over the commutator.the carbon and copper dust stick to the oil and become a conductive ... paste?I have seen the paste before and the next time, I will try cleaning the brushwith acetone. If the brush does not dissolve, I may try a soak.
I have the impression that the b-mann square frame motor brushes fit the brush barrelof the (what are we calling the motor?) athearn motor.
Peteski,I read in one of my posts that MP did use this same motor in the Pacificso MP may have used more than one supplier over a few runs.this 'athern' motor is not marked with a manufacturer name.
.... snip...Max,I recall you had a coreless motor from some one (nigel lawson?)that lasted about 8 hours in one of your projects.motors are important and can be such a pain.victor