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I think a skew wound motor would help. (?) Could one use a flywheeled RS3 motor, remove them, and fit into older frame? Thanks, Joe D
The motor in these Kato made Atlas locos is a very good motor. Running at slow speeds is not an issue unless MUing with different locos. If you are going to repower them, I would just replace them completely. The effort and expense really isn't worth it especially since the old shell fits on the new Atlas made chassis.
The Kato motor might be a good motor but it turns almost twice the RPMs at the same voltage as a scale speed motor. Seems like a waste to me to just throw them away when it would only be around $25 to get these old locos running great. They also pull much better that the new ones.
But it isn't a drop in fit. Major modifications to the frame would have to be done if you want flywheels. Even without flywheels, I think it takes frame modification. Then there is the drive shaft issues. It ain't easy. I thought about it, but in the end it was easier to take the $25 for a new motor and put it toward a flywheel equipped RS3 chassis. They can be found or I buy a complete loco for around $40. Sell the shell and sell the Kato chassis. It is a wash and depending on the roadname of the shell you can even make a few bucks. That being said, I love the old Kato made RS chassis. I only swap chassis for MUing purposes. I have a number of RS3/11s with the original chassis. Another trick is to swap out the trucks with Kato F unit trucks; the low friction ones with the bronze wipers. Truck side frames need to be changed.
No modifications are needed when using a scale speed motor without flywheels. I don't see the need for flywheels and the new trucks or I would have parked my old ones and purchased all new. Were do you find the new version for $40, I could use a couple.
I have spare motors if I ever need to make the swap. I may try it just to see the difference.
installed U25 gearing, and replaced the old Kato high speed motor with a Atlas scale speed motor.
Hey Guys: Fascinating discussion, mostly beyond my technical abilities at the moment. One question- why would it matter if the motor runs faster than necessary? (I'm thinking in a DCC world, you can control the top speed). Is this a DC issue? Thanks.
Are you talkign about the original Atlas/Kato trucks? The ones which use metal gear case? Could you provide some more details of exactly what was done (I don't own any U25s)? In order to change the gear ratio of a pair of directly-coupled gears, one gear will have to get smaller (fewer teeth) while another will have increased diameter (more teeth). The distance between the gear centers does remain the same. But there could be clearance problem around the gear with increased diameter. Or if the worm gear was the one with increased diameter, it would have to be located farther away from the worm.In those trucks the worm gear (it is a double-gear) couples with the worm (the larger gear), and the smaller gear couples with idle gears which then couple with the gear on the wheel-sets. Since the idler gears are involved, I don't see an easy way to just replace some gears to change the gear ratio. That's why I'm curious about how you did it.