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Leaving a traction motor outside in the rain is a bad thing unless the motor is junk anyhow. That's why I asked about an enginehouse setting. Traction motors must always be protected as they are very expensive. Locomotive wheelsets are also sensitive to the weather as you do not want the bearing surfaces on the wheel to get rusty and pitted. Even worn wheel sets are somehow protected to prevent rust on the bearing areas. Really the only place you would see motors is in or near a locomotive shop. You will never see them being transported on a flatcar unless they are thoroughly covered . Randy
... The only thing wrong with the above picture, the air duct should have a cover on it to keep foreign material out of the motor.
Our traction motors / wheel sets arrive via covered gondola's to minimize exposure but remember, these things are always outdoors when installed on a locomotive, which operate in all types of weather. The reason the motors are stored indoors is more about access and less about exposure. We use overhead cranes to place the traction motor on the drop table for installation on the locomotive. The only thing wrong with the above picture, the air duct should have a cover on it to keep foreign material out of the motor.
A locomotive is a good cover for a traction motor. They get stored indoors so that when you install them they don't get a ground relay going out the shop door. If my shop was in the desert I would'nt have a problem leaving them outside, I can shift them around with a forklift. Try putting a motor in a locomotive that's been left in a snowbank for a month, might as well just ship it right out and pay another 6 grand to have it baked out instead of pissing away the labor to install it.Randy StahlSuperintendent of LocomotivesProvidence and Worcester RR
I constantly change brushes on locomotive traction motors where I can write my name in the condensation on the armature, without tripping a ground. If the traction motor blowers are working properly, they'll dry those motors out in no time. Locomotive Electrician Norfolk Southern Railway
We sure have some real-life experts here. But Rich, I'm confused by your post.Are you saying that the reason for "constant" (more often than standard maintenance interval) brush replacement is condensation? Plus, what does some condensation which can be easily dried up by the stream of air coming from a blower have to do with long time idle storage in cold and snowy conditions?
I also successfully use the standstill dynamic brake technique to dry motors that otherwise are good but swallowed a bunch of snow in plow service. The point is that condensation doesn't usually have time to penetrate the motor to the point of no return. Leaving a motor out in the show or rain does.
Would it help you guys to know that the picture is from Cheyenne, which is pretty much in a desert?
Another way traction motors are ruined outside is by absorbing water and then freezing it breaking up the insulation ESPECIALLY on the interpoles !!Randy