M.B. Klien (modeltrainstuff) sells new Kato motors.
http://www.modeltrainstuff.com/SearchResults.asp?searching=Y&sort=1&search=kato&show=30&page=14
LION is putting NWSL motors on all of his subway trains. Easy job.
Measure the size of your motor in millimidgets, and then order one of the exact same size or even larger if you equipment can take it.
ROAR
The Route of the Broadway Lion The Largest Subway Layout in North Dakota.
Here there be cats. LIONS with CAMERAS
Cisco Kid:
Yes, its toast! Put some peanut butter on one side and drop it on the floor to see which side lands up.
Sorry, you have my sympathies. You can get it apart but getting it back together....?
Dave
I'm just a dude with a bad back having a lot of fun with model trains, and finally building a layout!
Thanks, Gentlemen.
It is from a brand new old stock Stewart F unit....Fooled me by running on DC for several minutes. Did not realize it would later quit, and would not run at all on DCC. Of course, by the time I figured out it was not a bad decoder etc. It was late in the day.
Yes, I have a remotoring kit from NWSL that I have already found will probably fit. I take it a bad can motor is toast....I would think so, and not worth trying to repair. Onward and upward.
Kinston is a town in NC where Buehler Motors was located. I believe they moved to the Raleigh Durham area. They make a variety of motors, but there website isn't especially helpful.
Are you asking if one can DIY fix a can motor or are can motors replaceable? Of course it can be replaced and NWSL has tutorials on remotoring certain specific loco motors. However we can neither see your engine nor your replacement motor.
Henry
COB Potomac & Northern
Shenandoah Valley
I guess Bühler motors are supposed to be one of the "top-of-the-line" motors. I probably had 2 dozen of them in various Stewart/Bowser locomotives. As I recall about four of them bit the dust. They would run fine for a few minutes, then bog down, current would go to about 2 amps and you could see sparks from the commutator, then after a minute or so, run OK. 20% failure rate!
I performed autopsies on them and could never find any cause for their failure. Some were newer with only an hour or so of running, others were much older. Still, the brushes, springs, commutators and windings all looked fine.
I just replaced them with other Bowser chassis, it was usually cheaper to find a complete chassis than the motor alone.
Kato, Genesis, BLI, Atlas, Life-Like/Walthers and the Stewart/Bowsers with Kato or newer non-Bühler motors have never given me any trouble.
Just my experience...
Ed
Might help if you told us what it is out of. I know Bowser had some problems with some of their motors and offered to replace them ....
Mark.
¡ uʍop ǝpısdn sı ǝɹnʇɐuƃıs ʎɯ 'dlǝɥ
I have a can motor out of a new old stock HO unit. It never has run. The motor has a short of some sort, I guess. It shows Buehler and Kinston NC USA on the housing. It runs for a time on DC then stops, then runs (as something cools down I guess) and shows continual short when hooked up to DCC decoder. I suspect it is garbage. I have a rmotoring kit spare that I might make fit, though I thought I would ask. Never encountered this before. Lucky, I guess.
Any thoughts? Thanks.