wannabe
28th April 2008, 09:01 PM
Help. My toy is broken!!
I'm hoping someone on here knows more about electric motors than I do. I'm having trouble with the motor on my mill. It's a 1.5KW single phase motor on a Hafco VM1 Mill (around 1987 vintage).
I went to fire up my mill today but when I turned it on all it did was hum. I've since found that by manually rotating the spindle to different position it will sometimes start. My initial thought was the capacitor but since it's either humming or starting I don't think that's the problem.
After taking the fan cowling off and looking inside I can see a contact switch and sliding centrifugal weights. From what I can determine the switch is normally closed when the motor is stationary. When the motor starts rotating the centrifugal weights slide down the shaft and allow the switch to open. I assume that with the switch in the closed position this allows the motor to start under reduced power and once the switch opens the motor then receives full power.
I think that due to wear the switch is not making full contact sometimes. I notice at the bottom of the centrifugal weights is a clamp that looks like it allows the weights to be moved up or down the shaft. What I'm thinking is that the switch needs a little more tension on it and was planning to slide the weights up a little to put a bit more tension on the switch. Does this sound feasible?
Looking at the size of the capacitor in this thing I'm very wary of sticking my finger in there. It would have one major bite to it.
Sorry this is so wordy. I was going to take a picture but it was 8 degrees out in the shed and got too cold. The joys of Canberra.
I'm hoping someone on here knows more about electric motors than I do. I'm having trouble with the motor on my mill. It's a 1.5KW single phase motor on a Hafco VM1 Mill (around 1987 vintage).
I went to fire up my mill today but when I turned it on all it did was hum. I've since found that by manually rotating the spindle to different position it will sometimes start. My initial thought was the capacitor but since it's either humming or starting I don't think that's the problem.
After taking the fan cowling off and looking inside I can see a contact switch and sliding centrifugal weights. From what I can determine the switch is normally closed when the motor is stationary. When the motor starts rotating the centrifugal weights slide down the shaft and allow the switch to open. I assume that with the switch in the closed position this allows the motor to start under reduced power and once the switch opens the motor then receives full power.
I think that due to wear the switch is not making full contact sometimes. I notice at the bottom of the centrifugal weights is a clamp that looks like it allows the weights to be moved up or down the shaft. What I'm thinking is that the switch needs a little more tension on it and was planning to slide the weights up a little to put a bit more tension on the switch. Does this sound feasible?
Looking at the size of the capacitor in this thing I'm very wary of sticking my finger in there. It would have one major bite to it.
Sorry this is so wordy. I was going to take a picture but it was 8 degrees out in the shed and got too cold. The joys of Canberra.