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Max, you didn't happen to notice if the brushes in that motor seemed soft, did you? I know that can fill commutator slots up pretty quickly.Back when I first got my Atlas/RoCo locos in the seventies, they wouldn't run very long before they would start sputtering and acting irratic.In every case, when I disassembled the motor, the slots were filled and when I scratched the side of a brush with my fingernail, I could tell the material was soft.Now, many years later, they run fine and I surmise that the binder has hardened through evaporation, making the brushes harder. The slots don't fill up at all now.Doug
One thing that might explain the lower voltage performance on the Peteski motor, if all else was equal, would be if he was using a PWM controller. That's the point of them and why they work. I suspect he'd have identified that and mentioned it but thought I would bring it up for those eavesdroppers who might not be as familiar as it would be an opportunity for a practical example of the "magic" of PWM (that isn't).
Creepy, Peteski. We tested with more identical conditions than I realized!My workbench test supply is also a home-brew thing based on an LM317T. Filtered and no pulse.(I like it that way, because engines always come off the bench and run better on the layout where I have a throttle that has a little half-wave pulse in it!)
It's very easy to destroy one of these motor by prying on a flywheel. If you pry from the commutator side you can move the commutator toward the stacks. This will loosen the wires and if you move it too much the wires will rub and wear threw very fast. Look at the picture posted of an armature and you should be able to plainly see what I am referring to.
Absolutely! Prying in any way is a complete no-no. A wheel puller braces a V-plate behind the flywheel and pushes the shaft out, so all the pushing stress is only on the flywheel itself. Likewise, slipping a V plate in behind the flywheel and letting the motor hang on that plate, and then punching the shaft out from above, puts all striking force and stress only on the flywheel itself. Doing this any other way is a sure fire way to destroy the motor.
Be careful with the hanging the flywheel from a plate then punching out the shaft method. I had a real stubborn flywheel once and progressively started punching a little harder and harder until the motor below basically blew apart, presumably from all the vibration.