We  recently bought a train set made by a renowned company and just  couldn’t resist looking inside the locomotive. Although it did have an  electronic decoder, the DCM motor was already available 35 (!) years  ago. It is most likely that this motor is used due to financial  constraints, because Märklin (as you probably guessed) also has a modern  5-pole motor as part of its range. Incidentally, they have recently  introduced a brushless model. 
The DCM motor used  in our locomotive is still an old-fashioned 3-pole series motor with an  electromagnet to provide motive power. The new 5-pole motor has a  permanent magnet. We therefore wondered if we couldn’t improve the  driving characteristics if we powered the field winding separately,  using a bridge rectifier and a 27 Ω current limiting resistor. This  would effectively create a permanent magnet. The result was that the  driving characteristics improved at lower speeds, but the initial  acceleration remained the same. But a constant 0.5 A flows through the  winding, which seems wasteful of the (limited) track power. A small  circuit can reduce this current to less than half, making this technique  more acceptable. 
 
 Converting a DCM Motor Circuit Diagram
The field winding has to be  disconnected from the rest (3 wires). A freewheeling diode (D1,  Schottky) is then connected across the whole winding. The centre tap of  the winding is no longer used. When FET T1 turns on, the current through  the winding increases from zero until it reaches about 0.5 A. At this  current the voltage drop across R4-R7 becomes greater than the reference  voltage across D2 and the opamp will turn off the FET. The current  through the winding continues flowing via D1, gradually reducing in  strength. When the current has fallen about 10% (due to hysteresis  caused by R3), IC1 will turn on T1 again. The cur-rent will increase  again to 0.5 A and the FET is turned off again. This goes on  continuously. 
The  current through the field winding is fairly constant, creating a good  imitation of a permanent magnet. The nice thing about this circuit is  that the total current consumption is only about 0.2 A, whereas the  current flow through the winding is a continuous 0.5 A. 
We  made this modification because we wanted to convert the locomotive for  use with a DCC decoder. A new controller is needed in any case, because  the polarity on the rotor winding has to be reversed to change its  direction of rotation. In the original motor this was done by using the  other half of the winding. 
There  is also a good non-electrical alter-native: put a permanent magnet in  the motor. But we didn’t have a suitable magnet, whereas all electronic  parts could be picked straight from the spares box. 
Source By : Streampowers
 




