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Have you tried running on plain old DC? Tried a decoder reset?
Its been a while, but I believe I tried a reset. I don't want to do that now unless absolutely necessary as it took me quite a while to get the lighting effects set up. I don't think it would help, but...No, I have not tried running it on DC. Certainly worth a try to see what happens. Thanks for the input!
To temporarily convert the model to DC, I would leave the decoder installed but unsolder the orange and gray wires from the decoder (or motor), then run a wires from the motor terminals to the track pickups. That way the decode and motor will be powered from DC but the decoder will not drive the motor.
Russ -- my guess is that one of the poles had a broken wire. I had that, on a Kato Mike, and it drove me crazy until I figured out what was going on. Depending on where the motor would stop, the wire was potentially contacting the motor frame and shortingGlad you figured it out.
Bad Pole, eh? I resemble that remark! If you want to play detective you could take the motor apart and test it for open winding by measuring the resistance between commutator segments.