Hi. I recently purchased a Postwar GP-9 and discovered the motor had been "upgraded" with capacitors and brushes with long wires extending from the top. Can someone please tell me the significance and/or improvements this feature gives to a motor?
The brushplate shown is a newer-style as well, so it's possible the shunted brushes and capacitors came along for the ride -- or you might have an entire motor that's a few decades newer than the rest of the chassis.
The shunted brushes help with conductivity. The caps cut down on motor "noise" (electrical interference) that can effect electronics. Those brushes were first introduced in the early 1990's, whereas the caps came along with the first TMCC locomotives in the mid-1990's.
Neither will effect the operation of your loco (in fact, the shunted brushes might actually improve things a bit). If you're a stickler for authenticity, then you'll need to the remove the caps, replace the brushes and brushplate with period pieces. But if everything works OK, I'd probably leave things as they are.
TRW