I'm not sure what any of that has to do with the Flexity cars, both the ones for the legacy system and the Flexity Freedoms. They are using AC traction motors, not DC.
Dan
A traction motor uses reformed AC from a DC source. A "traction transformer" is used to...I'm short on time, here's a published explanation:
Traction transformers
Traction transformers are critical components in the traction chain, affecting both train performance and operator services. ABB supplies traction transformers for all applications: high-speed, commuter and regional trains, locomotives, tram-trains and AC metros offering different designs in terms of size, weight and power ratings. They can be mounted either in the machine room of the train, on the roof or under the floor, providing maximum flexibility and reliability in single and multiphase systems.
Most of the world’s train manufacturers and rail operators rely on ABB traction transformers.
ABB supplies traction transformers for all applications: high-speed, commuter and regional trains, locomotives, tram-trains and AC metros offering different designs offering different designs in terms of size, weight and power ratings.
new.abb.com
In fact Siemens have the edge right now, but I digress. (As to how they've gotten it down to the size they have is a company secret)
A traction transformer is specifically designed to transform power from the locomotives overhead power that is delivered to the electric motors. The motors turn the wheels of a locomotive. Those are called the traction motors because the turning of the wheels uses the friction or resistance of the surface of the wheel in order to “grab” the surface of the rail. That is simply traction.
Answer (1 of 2): A traction transformer is a large single phase transformer fitted in the locomotive to feed power to traction motors and other auxiliaries. It takes 25kv AC from overhead line as primary voltage. This voltage is then stepped down to say 1500volts and fed to a rectifier for runnin...
www.quora.com
You can't put DC through an xfrmr, save in special instances where core saturation is the intention (edit: With caveats, the DC must be superimposed on a carrier AC)(resulting in massive power loss in the form of heat). (The purpose of this is usually for regulation at the expense of efficiency).(It's done magnificently nowadays with solid-state control either side of the xfrmr, and then the DC is reconstituted into AC for motor use.
DC systems, almost invariably used on streetcars and subways, don't use "traction transformers". They have solid state 'multivibrators' (an old term still used from the days of electro-mechanical devices) to turn the DC into a form of AC, in modern traction motors, almost invariably three phase AC...the same way solar cell arrays do for use as house and street current (the phase form is selectable, either single or triple) and the motor speed is controlled by both "chopping" of the applied voltage and synchronous variability in terms of the frequency of the reconstituted AC from DC.
Ironically, in the now almost universal single phase AC catenary use, it's rectified
after the traction xfrmr! into DC, and most often reconstituted before or after (sometimes both) the control circuits, and then applied to the traction motors.
There's many incredibly good engineering papers on-line.
I'm most familiar with toroid transformers, being deeply involved in their design, manufacture and distribution, albeit my emphasis is on audio output ones. Power circuits are mundane to audio nerds. What Siemens are doing (any modern traction xfrmrs are a form of toroid) is intriguing. I leave it at that.
Lots here:
The point is that running a DC powered vehicle eliminates the need for a traction transformer, albeit there are prototypical exceptions to that. And traction transformers, early ones being a massive weight, are now much smaller, and the reconstitution of the line frequency from, say, 60Hz to 600Hz before it's even transformed reduces the size/weight of the core geometrically. (Computer 'switching' supplies do this, to make them small and light, but still offer isolation from the line for safety)(some failing on the latter, btw)
That's the reason why aircraft control systems have used much higher line frequencies, It not only reduces the core size/weight of needed xfrmrs, it does for the motors too.
Why we use 400Hz Power Supply in Aircraft?