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Hi Strummer,what conclusions did the O guys reach?the differences may be in different units, and our options may get limited by size constraints.I suspect the end points may be close.victorI'm afraid I can only recall that a certain type of Pittman can motor (the series with a "2" or "3" after the first digit) was generally thought to better than others,although it pains me to admit I can't say why, offhand.Wish I could be of more help. You are correct in assuming that O scalers of course don't have to worry quite so much about interior space; I remember putting a very large Central Locomotive Works open-framed motor in an Atlas diesel. That motor itself probably weighed more than a half-dozen (or more!) N scale engines...fun stuff,that. And of course the sheer mass of models that big comes into play as well...Mark in Oregon
back emf will rear its ugly head...I want to say I think you are on the right path with that testbut you are allowing the motor speed to change and that will alsochange efficiency ratings.motors have efficiency curves... they change with motor speeds.measure at a given speed with no load and against a known load at the same speedif you plot this for about 5 speeds you can see the torque curve ( I think....)same loads against another motor should allow comparison.the Kato motor should display more torque than the Atlas slow speed motor.victor
one last kick...I have a kato 5 pole armature I have free of coils.and If I can locate it, I have a spool of 43 guage magnet wire.Two 43 awg strands are about the same resistance at one 40 awg wireif the same 95 wraps of two strand will fit, the resultant motor should have more torqueat the same voltage/current.shall we give that a try?victor