From the far, far reaches of the wild, wild west I am: rtpoteet
Unless you mount the motor SIDEWAYS, you'd have to have bevel or helical gears to get power to the axles. And if the motor WAS mounted sideways, the pinions wojuld all be crammed over to one side. Would also have to have more than one set of gears to get down to a reasonable speed. Worm drive seems to eliminate all that, at least in the smaller scales.
Remember: In South Carolina, North is southeast of Due West... HIOAg /Bill
R. T. POTEET wrote:tsgtbob, just call me former-tsgtjay!!!I am not a mechanical genius by any stretch of the imagination but the only other drive system besides a worm/worm gear drive system I can think of is what I will call a differential drive system - and that may very well be the same as your pinion/ring gear drive system. This drive system was, I have been lead to understand, quite prominent in O-Scale/O-Gauge in the twenties and thirties and perhaps even lasted into the post-WWII era. There may have even been some use in HO-Scale in the 1930s and into the late forties but I never encountered it in HO-scale.I did, however, encounter it in O-Scale/O-Gauge.In the mid-60s I joined an HO club in the Springfield, Mass area. This club went back into the late-thirties and had, several years before, converted from outside third-rail AC to 2-Rail DC but we had one cantankerous (but likeable) old codger - a WWI veteran well into his sixties if not already into his seventies - in the club whose home layout was still an outside third-rail pike. He was having to double purchase things - one locomotive for the club and one loco for home and he was genuinely tired of having to convert his newer HO purchases from DC to AC so they would run on his home pike. So, for about five or six Saturdays in a row, the club descended on his place to relay track and rewire his layout from AC to DC. He had, until converting to HO in the thirties been an O-Scaler/O-Gauger and I got looking over some of his O-Scale/O-Gauge models from the twenties and thirties and discovered this strange mechanism on the axle of his steamers. The looked surprisingly like the differential of my '59 Chevy and when I ask about them I was told that that was what they were, differential drives.
I remember the drive system that was used on some HO scale locomotives in the 50's and 60's. It was called a rubber-band drive and used exactlt that to turn the wheels. They had NO crawl capability, starting at a slow speed was nearly impossible and they went fantastically fast, so fast they would flip off the track in a 30'' radius curve! I for one, am glad this drive is no longer used.
As for the worm drive, I can think of three good reasons for it's popularity.
1. It gives good control at slow speeds.
2. It's cheap to manufacture.
3. It's ruggedly dependable.
Dr. Frankendiesel aka Scott Running BearSpace Mouse for president!15 year veteran fire fighterCollector of Apple //e'sRunning Bear EnterprisesHistory Channel Club life member.beatus homo qui invenit sapientiam
I think the main reason why worm gears are used is that they provide the best tourqe for the size and speed we want for model railroading.
The other, and quite important reason is that with worm drives, we're able to stop our locomotives and therefore our trains on grades.
Some old Key (brass) steam locos had the "coasting" drive, and it was very smooth running. However, if you ever tried to go downhill, you found yourself at the controls of a runaway, and the only way to stop it was to throw it into reverse and apply power...then it stopped on a dime.
Paul A. Cutler III*************Weather Or No Go New Haven*************
-Dan
Builder of Bowser steam! Railimages Site