That's part of what I'm curious about, so I've had a couple motors arc out and fail, however I never dug into what failed and tried to figure out why. I've actually got one right now that threw sparks and stopped but I haven't had time to tear it apart and see what failed. In my head though I guess it makes the most sense the wires wrapped around the armature would be the common failure point since if they are a fine wire we're dumping allot of current through them with heavier builds.
So as an example lets say a gearbox is setup with 16ga wire run through a mosfet with a 11.1v lipo. That full force of current is pushing through say 24ga wire wrapped around the armature, and it's a long 24ga wire which is going to increase resistance. So in my head at least I see 16ga dropping to 24ga wire the 24ga wire is going to get very hot if enough current is pushed through it and the point of failure is going to be the smallest wire or point of the most resistance.
Now that also leads to the thought that higher TPA means less heat which seems counter intuitive to me at least. It seems like the larger gauge wire carrying the more current would run cooler. And further down that rabbit hole, say two motors both run with 24ga wire one with say 12TPA and one with 22TPA it seems the motor with 12TPA is going to have lower resistance because it's a shorter wire at the end of the day, the 22TPA wire will be longer and thus higher resistance with the same wire material and gauge. That's the sort of thing that I'm really trying to further my understanding of, because it seems like there are some contradictions in some of the logic when it applies to DC motors. And likely there are other effects in play here that I don't understand which might explain some of this stuff. Since it's so much taken as common knowledge I'm curious what is driving these different things. Much like why is higher speed less efficient than higher torque. It would seem the efficiency would be about the same with appropriate gear ratios IE high torque motor on high speed gears vs. high speed motor on high torque gears.
I know this stuff isn't important necessarily to building a good functional gun but I'm a bit of a geek and I like to understand the underlying principals that dictate the behavior of stuff;) It's just the way my mind works;)
Oh and while I'm thinking of it, frankentorque motors. High TPA neo cans, seems like while it would have very high torque because of the space requirements on the armature it would make them prone to wire failures on the wraps because it's going to be smaller gauge wire to fit that many wraps. So that's part of where my thinking is above as well.
Take care!
Luke