Well OK boys and girls, we have some curious results here. TL;DR version is that two of the teal Reedy Mods with red dots are 16x2, while the third, missing its dot is a 17x3.
I think that this was either a sponsored driver who used motors once and then swapped out, or someone who drove extremely seldom and perhaps liked to run 4 cells nicad class in 1/12th. My guess is based on the fact that their comms have almost no wear at all on them, just a tiny bit of burn which I polished off using 800 grit and a drop of oil, plus each motor appeared to never have been opened. One had a bonus E clip inside of it, and every set of brushes is broken in then just set aside.
My biggest question remains in that I have no idea why Mike Reedy was making Teal Green Modifieds while over at Edinger St. were these meant for RC10s and old pan cars? I’ve added a photo comparing just how blue the labels are compared to a regular green reedy mod decal.
Construction is otherwise really nice. The NMB bearings are smooth as can be and an early take on combining a single teflon spacer under metal shims was employed for centering the arms inside their cans’ respective magnetic fields. They’re otherwise totally normal Reedys and you see the typical steps of hand wound quality such as some expose offset, the telltale reinforcement winding under the brazed comm tabs to each group of windings, and every stack is numbered.
That’s a bit weird: the 17x3 just had a number seven on it so it took some macro lens time to suss the winds. One 16 double is simply labeled as “16” on its arm, and the other 16d is old school winds-turns nomenclature so it reads ”26” on the armature stack. This was of course long before anybody dared make a 6-turn 540, so I suppose everyone just assumed it’d be in the teens when looking at a rotor made by this group.
Here are some fun pics of today’s restorations. Thanks for chiming in with any thoughts about these old guys:

Here’s the worst looking can. It had some tiny bit of surface corrosion to my disappointment but it polished up using 800-grit and shock oil just fine. It’s actually not too noticeable but it sure would’ve been a score to get three motors this old with nearly virgin comms, cans and arms. Do t get me wrong, this is a good lot. They’ll likely see some use in the future and in the meantime I’ll set them on display until I can turn the comms for their first times. Have a bit of a backlog to do there so that’ll be one of those ‘whaddydiddone RC today?’ Where a hot shower makes lots of sense.

Anybody make sense of the Dyno codes on these things? Every motor has a hex set of numbers. 3x2 pairs, on the red tags below the little timing decals. Neat stuff. Somebody was tuning.
Cheers, and thanks for coming along on my YA Reedy Mod motor adventure here.
—XOID