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They run smoother on DC with better low speed performance. The disadvantage is you have to install a bridge rectifier and an optional capacitor if it will fit. . Not always easy to fit even a bridge in some PW steamers. Some of them you have to un ground the motor lead connected to the chassis. Diesels are easier. 

 

Dale H

you can run a universal motor with DC current, it  will run stronger on lower voltage, better at slower speeds. Drawbacks are the horn or whistle will constantly be on and other accesories that employ a relay will be on constantly if using track power. The way around this is like Dale said and isolate the dc to the motors by doing the rectification on board and not from the source.

Regards,

Joe Geiser

Dale M,

I guess I don't really understand how a universal motor works compared to a DC can motor. What is the need for the rectifier?
Are you saying that the universal motor will only spin in a "forward" motion regardless of DC polarity?
If that is the case, what is it about the motor that makes it prefer a "forward" motion, relative to reverse, when DC polarity is not a determining factor?

I'm not questioning your logic or experience. I'm just trying to learn.

Flash:

 

A universal motor has the field electromagnet coil and the armature electromagnet coil in series.

 

The E unit, when cycled, takes one or the other of those coils (the field or the armature, depending on the type of motor) and reverses it with respect to the other coil.  That's what makes the motor run in reverse.

 

If you reverse the input DC to a stock motor, (assuming that you don't want to use the E unit) both the field and the armature magnets get reversed, but they stay the same polarity with respect to each other. So, the motor will still run in the original direction.

 

By putting a full-wave bridge rectifier between the supply and the field, when you reverse the track polarity, the armature polarity reverses, but the field polarity stays the same.  So, the motor will reverse.

Ok I think I've hot this now. In your drawing... The field winding polarity remains constant regardless of track polarity. Therefore, changing polarity to the armature creates the change in motion. So for the multiple posts. Took me awhile to trace out the rectifier circuit. Not I think I understand.

At the time I got my first "collector series" set back in 1988, I only had DC transformers (MRC Trainpower 6200). I too ran into the "horn sounding all the time" issue, but seeing as the locomotive (Lionel Pullmor-motored SD40) didn't have a bell, I just threw the polarity switch and the loco continued to run as before with its E-unit, but without the horn (which wasn't that much of a loss).

 

So, what was I doing "wrong"?

Originally Posted by RailRide:

At the time I got my first "collector series" set back in 1988, I only had DC transformers (MRC Trainpower 6200). I too ran into the "horn sounding all the time" issue, but seeing as the locomotive (Lionel Pullmor-motored SD40) didn't have a bell, I just threw the polarity switch and the loco continued to run as before with its E-unit, but without the horn (which wasn't that much of a loss).

 

So, what was I doing "wrong"?

You weren't doing anything wrong. The horn (which I don't like either) is triggered by a positive DC offset superimposed on the AC with the whistle button. If the "polarity" on the AC transformers with whistle control is backward, the horn doesn't work either, but the engine will still run.

 

The PullMor (universal) motors work by creating an electromagnet as opposed to using a permanent magnet They reverse reverse the phasing (polarity) of the electromagnet and the motor direction is reversed. That will happen under a DC or AC source. Lionel's are a little harder to modify internally because the locomotive frame is tied into the process and used as a "common" for the motor armatures as I recall. They do run smoother, quieter, and with better control under DC.

 

By the way, Frank Ellison's Delta Lines (revered by 2-railer and 3-railer alike) featured converted Lionel locomotives (running outside third rail) running on DC power.

It's interesting that this question of AC vs DC for running engines keeps coming up. I published and article on this subject in the July 2006 issue of TTOS's The Bulletin. Most current can motor engines with electronic E units work just as well on DC as they do on AC, so that's not much of an issue. Universal motors are a different story. In order to reverse the rotation of a universal motor, the polarity between the stator(field) coil and the armature needs to be reversed. That's what the E-units did in that F-N-R-N-F sequence. Lucky for us DC enthusiasts, when powering a universal motor with DC, a full wave rectifier module is a neat and simple solution with the AC input in series with the field coil and the DC output connected to each of the amature brushes. The bridge rectifier isn't doing any rectifying, it just happens to contain four diodes in a neat package that is easy to connect. You can obtain the same result with four properly connected individual diodes, which is what I did in the early days. There is no question that universal motors run better with smoother control on DC and make for easier lashups. The whistles, bells, etc. is wher you run into some issues. In general, the sound responds to one of the DC polarities and is quiet with the other.

Bob Walker

Flash, I did this with some Lionel Alco and used the 103 e-unit.  Add the bridge to hold current steady through the field.  You actually have some choices and can reverse the field, or the armature current, depending where you want to apply the FWBR.  You also need to be careful if this was a 2 position e-unit that has two field coils.  The engine runs fine, but what you loose is top end speed because of the significant voltage drops via the diodes of the electronic e-unit and from the full bridge rectifier.  I was doing this mod on 2 position mechanical e-unit engines.  Works fine.  G

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