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I totally took your remarks as helpful and with a sense of humor, Peteski! Not to worry.About that tire, I suppose a more accurate statement is that in a 3 axle truck, I usually findthat two of the wheels make good contact most of the time and the other one doesn't.I support all three could be perfectly aligned so they contact equally, but it doesn't seem likely.With my tire, the trick was to get it set just right so it makes some contact, but not enoughto lift the others off the rail. The first time, I didn't quite get it right. It stuck out too muchand the other two rocked on it like a see-saw. The pickup was terrible and the engine sputteredall over the place. So I cut another .005" into the grooves and tried again, with much success.It could run around my entire layout at creep speed with narry a sputter or stall.The "scale speed" motor would supposedly have more windings of thinner wire so it would turn slowerand produce more torque.
The whole thing about more/thinner windings vs fewer heavier windings and how that translates to torqueconfuses me too.What you say about fewer windings = lower resistance = more current make sense to me.And you would intuitively think that since it draws more current, it must be producing more torque, butI do not think that is true. I just don't understand enough about motors and magnetic fields.I do know this:A typical coreless motor, which has ultrafine wire in its windings and draws VERY little current,can produce a lot more torque than a conventional motor drawing a lot more current, so there's a lotmore to this whole torque output equation than just the resistance, current, and thickness of the windings.
Max: I doubt that you could align all three axles to make perfect contact, simply because our track isn't perfect. Even if the axles are in line, any uneven spots in the rails will leave at least one wheel out of touch.
To me it seems that "slow speed" motors while giving an appearance of a better choice (since they run slower at full throttle), aren't actually better than Kato motors. Now the gear ratio OTOH would be the elephant in the room. Higher gear ratio would increase the torque ant the wheels.
Me too! If it were the later "broadstripe", I wouldn't have done this.
The slower top speed of the Atlas scale speed motor is nothing more than a bonus for me. Not to be confused with what is called the Atlas slow speed motor, there not even close. It's the better low speed performance that I like. I have several Kato SD40s all with Atlas scale speed motors, and they will tighten up and pull a train out of one of my yards just perfect. I also own three Kato SD40-2s with the original Kato motors and they will not creep like the SD40s, they surge back and forth until there up to about 15-20 smph.
How many cars is the E8 pulling over how much of grade and what radius curve that it can't handle? I've had a stock KATO E8 pulling 16 KATO passenger cars up 2% grades and through 10.5"R curves (on a flat) with no trouble. I rate them as extremely heavy-duty haulers, up with the KATO PA and Walthers/LL DL109.
Slow, Scale whatever we call those - I thought there was only one (with people, or just me, calling them multiple names). Basically, the original (fast) and the slow/scale speed one. Now you say that there are 3 types of Atlas motor? Or just me using a bogus name? If I used bogus name - sorry. Scale speed or slow speed to me meant the same thing.So how exactly can you identify them in the first place? Even Atlas staff admitted that the black or gray plastic is not a dead giveaway to the motor type.