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I only run Kato. They are precision machines, so there is no "break in." We're not in the sixties anymore folks.....
Says you!
This is a really funny comparison. An automobile with internal combustion engine, liquid cooled, various pumps, many roller bearings, automatic transmission/transaxle, many machined metal parts, etc. to a DC motor driving an extremely simple "drivetrain" comprised mostly of molded synthetic components?
Obviously an n-scale locomotive isn’t a car, however, there’s a reason why guys talk about their locomotives running smoother and more quietly after a few hours of running. (Bearings etc) Same concept, smaller scale, less components. The concept is the point, not the vehicle. When you’re done facepalming yourself, think about it.
I really don't think that few hours of running will "break in" any of the model's plastic or metal gears. Plastic gears are molded from slippery plastic with no flash to "wear-in". Even if there was some flash, few hours of running would not wear-down the flash. Same with metal gears (which are rarely used in today's models), and if they are, they are machined to tight tolerances and very smooth. The worm and motor shafts, and the plastic or sintered brass bearings are ready-to-run out of factory.IMO, the entire mechanism "breaking-in" ideal is to large extent bunch of bull.One thing that can actually "break-in" are the motor brushes, but it will take more than few hours of running for them to better conform to the surface of the commutator.
I suspect that what we think is the "breaking in" effect from running locomotives for a few hours is really a combination of rubbing electrically conducting surfaces "clean" of corrosion and redistributing stiff lubricants. On steam locomotives, I suspect there really is some breaking-in on the valve gear, particularly piston rods that that really just slide in and out of holes in cast metal blobs with various amounts of paint in places it may or may not belong. Whatever, there is sometimes a really noticeable effect of locomotives "smoothing up" when run. But, it doesn't apply just to new locomotives. Locos that have been sitting around for a long time seem to demonstrate similar effects.