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Whether the "slow speed' and "scale speed" motors were different, or were just different terminology used by Atlas to refer to the motor, has been an argument of debate on numerous forums (just do a web search on "Atlas scale speed motor" and you'll see)
Based on this whole exercise where I learned more than I ever wanted to know, I believe they are the same, just different terminology.
What you have is three scale speed motors. The one you purchased from Atlas is a new version of the scale speed motor. The middle motor will turn almost 30,000 rpms at 12 volts. The difference between the slow speed motor and the fast speed motor is the skewed poles. The skewed poles were suppose to help the motor start sooner with a little more torque. IMO it never worked that great and probably the reason Atlas went to the scale speed motor. Some of the scale speed motors have the poles skewed a little more. Better picture.
The main reason for using skewed pole armature is to minimize cogging.So rrjim1, really how many different types of motors Atlas usede at some time or another in their split-frame N scale locos? Originally you showed a photo of 4 types, and the 5th motor you are now showing (gray bell, silver body, and very skewed poles) looks just like the cheap eBay motors. Call me confused.
Should have been less torque = smoother start, instead of more torque. Early hadn't had my coffee yet! The picture I posted was a little poor. That motor still has skewed poles but not as much as the middle motor. Toy motors, poor manufacturing? And yet another version - the armature.
The Railwire is not your personal army.
Now you have me confused and repeating what your un-caffeinated post stated. I meant to say that motor's rotor has skewed poles (not the armature). Armature is the part of the motor that doesn't rotate. It would be very helpful if someone would show *ALL* the various version of the motors, with clear descriptions and clear photos.
There's a good explanation here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armature_(electrical)The Armature is the part that carries the electrical current (e.g. the windings). Some motor designs (although not the ones we use in N scale trains) have the windings in the non-moving part of the motor.
The rotor-less photo rrjim1 posted made me more confused. I thought that the rotating part of our model train DC permanent-magnet motors is called a rotor. But, as the above explanation shows, it can be called armature. Also, the armature can be either rotating or stationary part of a motor. At least the non-rotating part of the motor is always called stator.
A rotor is essentially everything that comprises the moving parts of the motor, which may or may not include the armature, so the terms are not synonyms. All motors contain a rotor, regardless of whether the armature is stationary or moving.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotor_(electric)