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Did you try a drop of oil at each motor shaft? Those are bronze bushings and they can get "dry" leading to tight running. You might be able to get a sense if that's the problem by spinning the shaft, especially if you have a known good one to compare it to. If bad enough you may be able to feel the difference.
There are three obvious things that could be happening. 1. Either the bearings are getting so dry that they are causing a lot of friction and slowing the motor down, 2. or there is a short in the armature windings. Either way, you would likely have a motor that gets very hot when it runs.A dry bearing usually squeals like mad when things get this bad.Can you run a motor on your workbench, with a milliammeter hooked up in line to measure the current? That will be the first, most important, thing to check.After you measure the current, try putting *one* drop of light oil on each shaft bearing, and see if the motor speeds up and/or the current drops. If that does not help, it's probably the armature and there ain't much you can do except replace the motor.3. Or .... do these motors hook into the drivetrain with a ball, cup, U-joint thing pressed onto the motor shaft? (I don't keep track of all the nuances of these diesel drivetrains. I know some have a flywheel with a machined recess for the shaft drive, some have a plastic fitting). When you replaced the motors, did they come with those plastic fittings already installed? It's possible that those fittings were slipping on the motor shaft, and that the motor itself wasn't bad at all.
I don't believe the affected motors have the ball cup. I know for a fact that the one I was working on with the U23B has the hex shaped hole in the flywheel, and the driveline is not slipping. As I stated in my previous post, I did try oiling the bearings a while back when I first tried to deal with the problem. The motor was not making any squealing noises at all, and I never noticed that the motor got hot, either.I'll try to measure with a multimeter. I've got one but don't really know how to use it. I may ask for some guidance when I get the opportunity to get some time at the workbench.Thanks,DFF
Yeah, count me in the camp of uninformed multi-meter users. I have two of them but both had documentation that assumes you already know what you're doing.
I have no less than three locomotives in my fleet that have no motors due to swaps and at least three bad motors.Thanks,DFF