Be careful loosing the motor field can be dangerous
The three main types of DC motors are: Permanent Magnet, Shunt wound, and Series wound.
Permanent Magnet
These motors have a permanent magnet which generates a magnetic field. Rotating in this field is the armature through which current is passed. The armature will be wound from only a few turns of quite thick copper, giving it a low resistance. When a voltage is applied this will draw a very large current from the battery. When the motor starts to rotate the current will drop due to an effect called "back EMF". This is the voltage generated by the armature as if the motor was a dynamo. For example for a motor running at 12V with an armature resistance of 0.1 ohm, at start up the current drawn by the motor would be 120A (known as the stall current). The action of the armature wires rotating in the field may generate a back EMF voltage of 11V giving a total drive voltage across the motor of 1V. This would give a current of 10A. If load is applied to the motor the speed of rotation would drop, this would also cause the back EMF voltage to drop, and hence the drive voltage to the armature to increase. This increase in armature current would then cause the motor to try and speed up. i.e. the motor will try and maintain a constant speed.
Shunt wound
These are very similar to a permanent magnet except the magnetic field is supplied by passing a current through a fixed coil positioned around the armature. Operation is exactly the same as the permanent magnet motor, except these motors also have the possibility of field current control. This is where it gets interesting (or very boring). If the field current is reduced the motor speeds up. This can be explained by considering the example above. If the field current is reduced the magnetic field will drop causing the back EMF voltage to drop. This increase in the drive voltage to the armature will cause the motor to speed up until the back EMF is once again at its previous level. The penalty for this speed increase is loss of torque - with such a low field magnetic field the motor will be quite weak. However, by using a high field current the motor will turn quite slowly but with very high torque - the penalty here being potentially wasting current in the field when the torque requirement is low.
Series Wound
In a series wound motor the field coil is in series with the armature coil. The field coil is wound from thick wire to cope with the large armature current and has a resistance of only a few ohms. The advantage of this type of motor is its high torque output. Consider a series motor running with a given load. If the load is now increased the motor will slow causing the back EMF to drop. As with the previous type of motor the current drawn will be the difference between the voltage applied and the back EMF produced. This large increase in current will cause both the armature and the field magnetic strength to increase, resulting in a very high output torque. Hence this motor is used in high torque situation i.e. starter motors. The disadvantages are the large current drawn will soon flatten batteries, and if run for prolonged periods the motor will soon overheat. The other point that should be noted is the motor without substantial modification will only run in one direction as reversing the armature current will also reverse the field current.