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@RickO posted:

So, I guess an undersized mabuchi with a sketchy gearbox ,might be a better choice...😉

I would say no.  The way most 3-rail O gauge locos are made, the gearbox and/or intermediate gears are the hardest thing to replace- you pretty much have to buy a new chassis, which down the road could be hard or impossible to find.  I've seen the threads about shimming the motor mount on the L1 Mikado, etc.  That's a good preventative measure if you own a balky one.  But I find it appalling that as hobbyists we have to come up with band-aid fixes like this on our own!!

This Hudson has a true "gearbox" independent of the motor, which absorbs thrust and maintains a constant mesh between the worm and worm wheel.  It appears to be cast-in.  So it's not replaceable or repairable, and there's no prospect of changing the gear ratio.  But I would still choose this over the setup in the I1/L1 ten times out of ten.  Alex didn't mention the gear ratio or whether it's back-drivable, but most of Lionel's larger steam locos with Legacy do have back-drivable gears, and that's a good thing!

If you can't live with the risk of motor failure, this design makes it easy to replace the motor.  But Pittman motors have become expensive and a little hard-to-find themselves.  @gunrunnerjohn could some type of fusing, or "safety circuit" be devised, to be placed between the motor and the board stack, preventing the cascade failure you describe?

Regarding the number of pickups, I agree that two is too few.  However, historically, unlike MTH, Lionel has also installed pickups on its tender trucks.  So they could be bridged to the loco with a tether if needed for reliable operation.  I'm not really a fan of streamlined steam.  But IMO the mechanical pedigree of this one seems to be above-average.

Last edited by Ted S
@Ted S posted:
If you can't live with the risk of motor failure, this design makes it easy to replace the motor.  But Pittman motors have become expensive and a little hard-to-find themselves.  @gunrunnerjohn could some type of fusing, or "safety circuit" be devised, to be placed between the motor and the board stack, preventing the cascade failure you describe?

If you don't want to stick the Pittman in, you could use a 3A trip PTC, that would be reasonable protection.  I'd still rather have the Pittman.

@Ted S posted:

Regarding the number of pickups, I agree that two is too few.  However, historically, unlike MTH, Lionel has also installed pickups on its tender trucks.  So they could be bridged to the loco with a tether if needed for reliable operation.  I'm not really a fan of streamlined steam.  But IMO the mechanical pedigree of this one seems to be above-average.

Well, actually, virtually all the Lionel TMCC and Legacy steam has pickups on the tender as most of them also have the IR link between the locomotive and tender and no physical wired connection.  If you're gonna' have sound, you need electricity.

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