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In lugnet.trains, James Brown writes:
> Hmm. Is motor damage likely to occur? The intention with this would be for
> either an operator or an RCX to briefly pulse the motor in the appropriate
> direction; power is being applied for less than a second, which is enough to
> flip the switch. If power is maintained, the motor axle stops rotating, and
> I understand that doing that will cause the motor some grief, but I'm not
> familiar enough with the technical side of things to know if the 1/2 second
> pulse will cause wear-and-tear on the motor.
I've always been hard on my motors, stalling them often. It's never seem to
affect their performance, or even damage them.
The difficult part of stalling a geared motor is containing the large forces
generated on the structure surrounding the gear train. It's very difficult
to stall one without a super-strong construction. Your more likely to break
apart your model, or your gears, first.
TJ
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Message has 1 Reply: | | Re: Motorized Switch
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| (...) Yep, and with this one using an 8-tooth gear straight on the rack, even with a solid structure you'd be very likely to break the gear. If you can supply an accurately timed "pulse", that would reduce the risk, but with the geared motors, it (...) (22 years ago, 7-Jun-02, to lugnet.trains, lugnet.technic)
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Message is in Reply To:
| | Re: Motorized Switch
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| (...) Ok, I guess I see that, although I could only find a couple designs, and they seemed much more complicated that necessary. (...) Hmm. Is motor damage likely to occur? The intention with this would be for either an operator or an RCX to briefly (...) (22 years ago, 6-Jun-02, to lugnet.trains, lugnet.technic)
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