Never miss an opportunity to STFU
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Never be more than one step away from your sword-Old Greek Wisdom |
| Posts: 2294 | Location: SE Mich-- USA | Registered: September 10, 2002 |
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| quote: Originally posted by arfmel: If you have a place nearby that can repair it, that’s what I’d do. At least let them look at it. And you are fortunate to have that option.
Ditto what he said . Can't hurt to try . |
| Posts: 4362 | Location: Down in Louisiana . | Registered: February 27, 2009 |
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| quote: Originally posted by shiftyvtec: Are the contacts in the centrifugal switch intact at the back of the motor? Does it actuate correctly?
I had an air compressor motor that would act the same way . The centrifugal switch was stuck in the RUN position .When the compressor cut off , it would not start unless you smacked the end bell with a wrench and the switch would flop over to the START position . |
| Posts: 4362 | Location: Down in Louisiana . | Registered: February 27, 2009 |
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| If you took the leads off and tested and have a dead short, then anything else is not in the picture. Have you ever put new windings in a motor before?
NRA Life Endowment member Tri-State Gun collectors Life Member
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| I repaired industrial woodworking equipment for 18yrs, troubleshot countless motors.
You'll have continuity across a good motor, leads T1 and T2. Symptoms you're describing is one of two things, bad motor or dropped a leg for some reason/trying to run the motor 120VAC.
You might of tried these...
Unplug the motor leads and ground from the magnetic switch. Turn on breaker or plug back in.. Check voltage between L1 and ground, L2 and ground. L1 or L2 can be dead and still read 240VAC across them. One dead, cord/plug/outlet or breaker. If that's OK, turn on the switch. Check voltage T1 and ground, T2 and ground. One dead, bad switch/dirty contacts. If that's OK, hard wire (wire nuts) the motor directly to cord. Turn on breaker. If the motor runs. it's going to jump a bit, stand on it.... Be ready to turn the breaker off immediately if doesn't start. If you don't catch it, that's OK, breaker will do it's job. If the motor runs, most likely a problem with the switch. Switch can pass voltage w/o a load, fail when loaded. 30yr old motor doesn't run and you've changed the caps... I would replace it with a Baldor or Leeson. |
| Posts: 3197 | Location: 9860 ft above sea level Colorado | Registered: December 31, 2008 |
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Quit staring at my wife's Butt
| The unisaw motors are special as they have welded taps on them for mounting , you cant just replace it with a standard motor frame. I would run it down to your local motor rewind shop or try what offgrid suggest thats very good info.
I had a motor that did the same thing but would blow capacitors, I ended up changing out the motor start switch because of the burnt contacts as you stated and problem went away. does the motor smell burnt? or are any of the winding off color ? |
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