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Back in the 1880's the level of experimentation on real steam was in full swing, you have to admire this guy for trying:http://www.douglas-self.com/MUSEUM/LOCOLOCO/fontaine/fontaine.htmMy hero, misguided and all - I'll prove it won't work!
Okay so one of my Retro Bros on the face toobs recommends this motor as an almost direct swap.https://www.ebay.com/itm/DC-6V-12V-27000RPM-High-Speed-Mini-DC-Motor-DIY-RC-Slot-Car-Drone-Toy-Model-/192873670885?hash=item2ce82aa8e5&fbclid=IwAR1jXmt4DKtxc1WfI_EQ2-XWZ2ECnVmfBN2V52ZXH01kd6guWWQnyJBVQb012v rated, 2mm shaft, so definitely less fiddling to do with it, but open frame, skew wound... looks a lot like the later motors that Rivarossi used during the Con Cor era.Any thoughts? They're certainly cheap enough. I might order a couple for the next batch of projects. (I might have all of the current batch done by the time the slow boat gets here from China...Lee
Randy, you have that backwards. For permanent-magnet electric brushed DC motors the maximum torque is at stall (not at peak RPMs). When the motor is stalled, there is no BEMF being generated, so the maximum current flows through the winding, creasing maximum magnetic field (thus maximum torque).I have those 6-pole motors Max recommend to Lee. Actually I found those on eBay and pointed Max towards them. He got some and was very impressed by their torque. While I don't have any measured results, I can tell you that for what they are (standard motors with iron-core rotor), then have very impressive torque. My test is my calibrated fingers pinching the spinning shaft. They really are impressive.
I've been meaning to ask, Lee, I have an old Minitrix K4, loco only/no tender./box It's been forever since I ran it, so I have no idea what it's doing these days, but if you want it, it's yours (as soon as I find it).Bryan