Wanted to split this off from another recent post.
It seems the motors, can motors, in Williams locos have a tendency to get extremely hot with little operational time. I mean too hot to touch, HOT!
I've got the following Williams locos:
GP30 (WBB, new design)
SD90 (Original Williams, common design)
GP9 (WBB, common design)
FA1 (Original Williams, common design)
4-6-0 Steam (WBB, new design)
4-8-4 J Steam (WBB, common design)
Peter Witt Trolley (WBB, new design)
I have another engine, MTH, that had the boards go bad. I had the electronics swapped for a Williams/Bachmann reverse board and True Blast Plus sound board. All components except sound and reverse boards are original MTH.
The following get blistering hot within maybe 20 minutes of operation.
GP9 (Brand new and sent back to dealer for exchange or repair)
4-84 J (Back at dealer to replace motor to hopefully get it to run cool)
The GP30 doesn't get blistering hot but does get "luke warm".
The SD90, Trolley and 4-6-0 run cool as a cucumber!
Again, this seems to be a common thing with Williams locos. I've also noticed that as the motors get blistering hot, so does the trucks, or at least the pick up rollers. Not sure if there is a connection or the metal is just conducting the heat. I've heard of many fixes - bad motors, bad reverse boards and more. I've tried swapping reverse boards from the SD90 and GP9 and there was no noticeable difference in heat leading me to believe the reverse board has nothing to do with it. Is this just common with Williams motors? The motors look the same in all of the engines, except the trolley. The diesel shell or steam loco cab (J) also get extremely hot. I've properly lubricated all of the engines per instructions with no change.
Who else has Williams locos where the motor gets extremely hot? I'm curious if this is a common thing. It is clear that this isn't isolated to one "era" of engines. Original Williams and WBB both have cool and hot motor examples based on my list above. Would like to hear from those with Williams locos.