Originally Posted by MrNabisco:
This may fall into the discussion of AC to DC conversion...
I'm running a 24v DC Pittman motor on AC track power by using a small simple bridge rectifier. It works OK, i.e. the loco runs fine. But should it have a filter capacitor? Would this effect motor output/performance?
Would a converter as shown above be a better way to get DC power to the motor than a small bridge rectifier?
FYI: I'm talking about a big Pittman motor pulling a heavy standard gauge train.
Thanks,
Bert
K-Line used to add this to their motors. They made up a 500 uf non-polarized capacitor out of 2, 1000 uf polarized ones in series. (2 like terminals such as the 2 +s are connected together, the other 2 go to the motor). Makes the motor run a bit smoother and gives a small amount of electrical driven momentum. Not that noticeable. Be better if larger capacitors could be fit in. In theory a good idea. I do it on some of my locos which are forward only,then a polarized capacitor can be added to a bridge rectifier driving the motor in one direction. A diode in series can also protect a polarized capacitor with bi directional operation. A lot of ways to do this. A small value resistor,maybe 18 ohm half watt in series to the capacitor will relieve arcing.
Dual motored diesels can be driven in one direction using 2, 6 amp diodes instead of the bridge. This is like series motor wiring without the drawbacks. Each motor runs off opposite halves of the sine waves. A capacitor across each motor can smooth the pulsed current a bit.
Dale H