A couple of years ago I bought a #50 from Da Bay, which requires periodic tune-ups to keep running smoothly. In the course of performing those tune-ups so many times, one end of one of the sets of magnet wire finally broke off – and of course, it was part of the ”inner” winding so I spent some time unwinding the “outer” winding, bringing out a new length, and rewinding everything back together. Problem solved.
But it got me to thinking: why did Lionel double-wind the motor on the #50 (and all of the similar “bump to reverse” items)? They were already engineered to mechanically switch one side of the motor when bumped – why not have switched both sides and eliminate the second winding? I’m assuming it was simply a cost-of-manufacture decision - but does anyone have any other insights into the reasoning?