Bruce,
Thanks much for chiming in here ... I was hoping you would. Your response confirms my suspicion that the drive rod location (with respect to the armature) makes essentially no significant impact on torque/power. I hadn't thought about the magnitude of brush friction vs. rod friction. Interesting.
That said, you're prior comment about motor torque being non-steady (2:1 peak output ratio, if I recall) has me thinking (purely from a geeky theoretical standpoint) if there is, in fact, some optimum drive crank / drive rod orientation that would yield max drive power. In my boat design work, I deal with mathematical optimization problems like this a lot ... fine tuning various design parameters to find that one, subtle point where all the planets align -- ever so gingerly -- in a "best solution" manner.
In the case of our locos, the delta and potential gains are super tiny. But the geek in me still think about things like that. Unfortunately!
Thanks for your thoughts ... much appreciated!
TJ
Thanks much for chiming in here ... I was hoping you would. Your response confirms my suspicion that the drive rod location (with respect to the armature) makes essentially no significant impact on torque/power. I hadn't thought about the magnitude of brush friction vs. rod friction. Interesting.
That said, you're prior comment about motor torque being non-steady (2:1 peak output ratio, if I recall) has me thinking (purely from a geeky theoretical standpoint) if there is, in fact, some optimum drive crank / drive rod orientation that would yield max drive power. In my boat design work, I deal with mathematical optimization problems like this a lot ... fine tuning various design parameters to find that one, subtle point where all the planets align -- ever so gingerly -- in a "best solution" manner.
In the case of our locos, the delta and potential gains are super tiny. But the geek in me still think about things like that. Unfortunately!
Thanks for your thoughts ... much appreciated!
TJ