Hello everyone,
This is my first post, so please bear with me. I am trying to work out how the motor to my table saw is wired. I bought it second hand and I think the previous owner has messed with it. One of the brush holders had been forced in and was touching the commutator. I am wondering whether to bin the motor and replace it with a new one. I have replaced the brushes and sorted the brush holder, and the motor turns by hand, but not when switched on.
The winding had burnt out the winding at the connection, which I have desoldered. I am pretty confident that the winding is now ok. The previous owner had replaced the 5amp plug fuse with a 13amp one, presumably when the fuse blew. So it is not surprising that the winding would fail before the 13amp fuse.
I am confused about the way the field windings are connected.
The field has two thicknesses of winding, a very fine one (underneath) and a thicker one on top of the finer one.
The cable from the switch (an NVR, overload switch and small flat capacitor) to the motor has three cores plus earth. I can't work out from the switches how the mains cable two core plus earth, changes to 3 cores plus earth.
One core goes to the one of the carbon brushes and one goes to the thin winding wire and one to the thicker winding wire. There is another wire coming from the thicker winding wire which goes to the second carbon brush.
What I can't work out is:-
1) why is there a single wire going to the thin winding wire? What is the other end attached to? Is this a starting winding or something? Is this 'extra' wire a switch wire?
2) is the wire coming from the thicker winding wire to the carbon brush attached? Is the thicker winding attached only to the incoming and out-going core?
3) are both the cores coming into the field both live or neutral? (or one of each?)
4) if I wanted to bypass the switches and the mains cable and connect the motor up to a 12 v car battery to try it out, can I connect two of the cores to the + and one to the - ? Or is that a bonkers idea?
Thanks in advance,
Steve
This is my first post, so please bear with me. I am trying to work out how the motor to my table saw is wired. I bought it second hand and I think the previous owner has messed with it. One of the brush holders had been forced in and was touching the commutator. I am wondering whether to bin the motor and replace it with a new one. I have replaced the brushes and sorted the brush holder, and the motor turns by hand, but not when switched on.
The winding had burnt out the winding at the connection, which I have desoldered. I am pretty confident that the winding is now ok. The previous owner had replaced the 5amp plug fuse with a 13amp one, presumably when the fuse blew. So it is not surprising that the winding would fail before the 13amp fuse.
I am confused about the way the field windings are connected.
The field has two thicknesses of winding, a very fine one (underneath) and a thicker one on top of the finer one.
The cable from the switch (an NVR, overload switch and small flat capacitor) to the motor has three cores plus earth. I can't work out from the switches how the mains cable two core plus earth, changes to 3 cores plus earth.
One core goes to the one of the carbon brushes and one goes to the thin winding wire and one to the thicker winding wire. There is another wire coming from the thicker winding wire which goes to the second carbon brush.
What I can't work out is:-
1) why is there a single wire going to the thin winding wire? What is the other end attached to? Is this a starting winding or something? Is this 'extra' wire a switch wire?
2) is the wire coming from the thicker winding wire to the carbon brush attached? Is the thicker winding attached only to the incoming and out-going core?
3) are both the cores coming into the field both live or neutral? (or one of each?)
4) if I wanted to bypass the switches and the mains cable and connect the motor up to a 12 v car battery to try it out, can I connect two of the cores to the + and one to the - ? Or is that a bonkers idea?
Thanks in advance,
Steve