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If you plan on running slowly all the time, could you set the maximum voltage in the decoder? That might force it to send pure(r) DC at full throttle, and minimize the heating.(I know NOTHING about operating with DCC, except that most modern decoders don't do well on my DC layout.)
This is why it's more important to monitor motor current draw than voltage.Doug
Yes, I'm going to play around with shielding and see if that helps.People are monitoring motor current draw?
....I don't think it is excessive current consumption but the constant full voltage pulses motor sees and the fact that the armature spins slowly in very small air chamber without any ventilation.Russ, a good thing to try would be to run that melted (but still functioning) loco, just the chassis without a shell, for a similar operating session as the one which melted it, and then right after finishing the session check the temperature of the exposed armature (I guess by using your finger) to see how warm it is. I expect it will not be all that hot.
I will give that a try.With regards to placing a thin metal over the opening, I've been trying to figure out what that may or may not accomplish....On one hand and as someone mentioned earlier, it could dampen the small amount of ventilation that is there and potentially make things get even hotter (at least in the motor cavity).On the other hand, the metal shielding seems like it could disperse any pinpoint heat that could melt the shell and disperse it over a wider area of the shield thru conduction. Additionally, if the thin metal shielding was in direct (overlapping) contact with the frame, it seems like this heat dispersion could be even greater. The question is, would the temp decrease overall with this dispersion thru conduction, or would it just result in a larger area being hot enough to melt the shell?
Whether DC or PWM, if the motor is getting hot enough to melt that plastic, it's drawing too much cumulative current for the RPM.Doug