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rsmith52
Joined: 16 Mar 2017 Posts: 15 Location: Crawford, CO
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2020 11:51 am Post subject: 3/4HP Belt Sander Motor |
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Not directly aircraft related but a tool that I use extensively in construction of my Bearhawk for shaping metal parts. The motor is now spooling up very slowly and when a load is placed on it, slows down considerably. As far as I can tell, it is brushless, It's described as Type: TEFC Capacitor-Start Induction and does have a large external capacitor. Any ideas on repairing instead of replacing this?
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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect Guest
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2020 4:09 pm Post subject: 3/4HP Belt Sander Motor |
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At 02:46 PM 4/13/2020, you wrote:
Quote: | Not directly aircraft related but a tool that I use extensively in construction of my Bearhawk for shaping metal parts. The motor is now spooling up very slowly and when a load is placed on it, slows down considerably. As far as I can tell, it is brushless, It's described as Type: TEFC Capacitor-Start Induction and does have a large external capacitor. Any ideas on repairing instead of replacing this? |
Hmmm . . only one capacitor? If so, the capacitor
is significant only for starting. If it spools up
slowly -AND- lugs down under load, I'm thinking
the motor has hurt windings . . . not good if
this is the case.
There is a centrifugal switch that disconnects
the start winding and its companion capacitor
after the motor reaches some fraction of
nameplate rpm. If that switch is burned, then
it wouldn't start at all. The fact that
it is 'sluggish' at all times does not bode well.
Bob . . .
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barp99(at)gmail.com Guest
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2020 5:00 pm Post subject: 3/4HP Belt Sander Motor |
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On 14/04/2020 10:05 am, Robert L. Nuckolls, III wrote:
Quote: | At 02:46 PM 4/13/2020, you wrote:
Quote: | Not directly aircraft related but a tool that I use extensively in construction of my Bearhawk for shaping metal parts. The motor is now spooling up very slowly and when a load is placed on it, slows down considerably. As far as I can tell, it is brushless, It's described as Type: TEFC Capacitor-Start Induction and does have a large external capacitor. Any ideas on repairing instead of replacing this? |
Hmmm . . only one capacitor? If so, the capacitor
is significant only for starting. If it spools up
slowly -AND- lugs down under load, I'm thinking
the motor has hurt windings . . . not good if
this is the case.
There is a centrifugal switch that disconnects
the start winding and its companion capacitor
after the motor reaches some fraction of
nameplate rpm. If that switch is burned, then
it wouldn't start at all. The fact that
it is 'sluggish' at all times does not bode well.
Bob . . . | There is a small chance it is a capacitor run motor. A capacitor run motor has no centrifugal switch, and the second winding stays in circuit. If your capacitor starts to fail, its capacitance will drop, reducing the phase angle between the two magnetic fluxes, reducing start and run torque. If no centrifugal switch, check the capacitor for correct capacitance, and replace if low, this may be an easy and cheap fix.
Brian Phillips.
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stuart(at)stuarthutchison Guest
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2020 7:27 pm Post subject: 3/4HP Belt Sander Motor |
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I have a recurring problem with the start circuit on my heavy duty cold saw, but it’s an easy fix.
I started by changing the capacitor, but it wasn’t that. Turns out that periodically I need to use a small file to clean the centrifugally-controlled points that keep the start capacitor in circuit until the motor spools up. Otherwise it stays slow, bogs down and starts making smoke after about 30 seconds. I get a season or two out of it before cleaning again.
Cheers, Stu
Quote: | On 14 Apr 2020, at 10:53 am, Brian Phillips <barp99(at)gmail.com (barp99(at)gmail.com)> wrote:
On 14/04/2020 10:05 am, Robert L. Nuckolls, III wrote:
Quote: | At 02:46 PM 4/13/2020, you wrote: Quote: | Not directly aircraft related but a tool that I use extensively in construction of my Bearhawk for shaping metal parts. The motor is now spooling up very slowly and when a load is placed on it, slows down considerably. As far as I can tell, it is brushless, It's described as Type: TEFC Capacitor-Start Induction and does have a large external capacitor. Any ideas on repairing instead of replacing this? | Hmmm . . only one capacitor? If so, the capacitor is significant only for starting. If it spools up slowly -AND- lugs down under load, I'm thinking the motor has hurt windings . . . not good if this is the case. There is a centrifugal switch that disconnects the start winding and its companion capacitor after the motor reaches some fraction of nameplate rpm. If that switch is burned, then it wouldn't start at all. The fact that it is 'sluggish' at all times does not bode well.
Bob . . . | There is a small chance it is a capacitor run motor. A capacitor run motor has no centrifugal switch, and the second winding stays in circuit. If your capacitor starts to fail, its capacitance will drop, reducing the phase angle between the two magnetic fluxes, reducing start and run torque. If no centrifugal switch, check the capacitor for correct capacitance, and replace if low, this may be an easy and cheap fix. Brian Phillips.
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