So my buddy's fairly robust SouthBend-Nordic-15 (very accurate, 60" bed, I
believe) went on the fritz, blowing fuses -- worked the the night before,
the next morning, bzzzzt....
When he was in Brooklyn, I was mostly off the hook for his repairs, but now
that he is in Yonkers, not far from me.... goodgawd.....
So I open the lower panel, and Holy Shit..... the first thought that came
to my mind is:
Just how many fukn wires and electro-mechanical gadgets do you g-d need
to rotate a fukn spindle???????
I said, Dude, I hope you have a fukn book/print for this thing.....
Long story short, since he couldn't find the book, I eliminated all
supply-side problems, and then *I think* I was able to isolate the motor
electrically, and indeed, the motor appears blown.
Which in a sense is not so bad, because having that motor re-wound will
likely be a fraction of the cost of actually having to replace anything from
SouthBend.... The last switch gadget he had to buy was effing $900!!!!.
BUT, it is going to be one muthafucka to get to that motor, since the lathe
is in, uh, a fairly "compact" shop.... goodgawd.....
But here are the Qs:
1. Is this a "motor constantly on" type lathe, with the crank switch (off
the carriage) engaging a clutch?
Or is the motor itself activated by the carriage crank switch?
Ahm no spert, but the only clutch-ditty I've seen was the newer square head
Clausing Colchesters, with that shitty multi-plate ditty that never worked
right on our machine. Nice machine, but what a pita that clutch was.
2. WTF *IS* alladat shit inside the control panel?
I see a transformer (about 10 lbs mebbe), with a dozen taps going to a
terminal ditty with two bitty glass fuses; a heavy duty diode *full wave
rectifier*!! DC???? For what?????
A fancy-shmancy twist handle breakered switch, a semi-normal contactor, and
some abnormal relay with some kind of timer knob?? timing what???, and
three little can-type ditties, one in series with each phase wire, about
3/4" dia x 1" long.
And another terminal block with a cupla dozen wires on it.
Goodgawd..... for a *motor*????
I guess what I would like is mebbe an overview, and overall sense of why all
this stuff is necessary.
Heh, my crappy li'l 13x40 Enco has a bit of control box as well, but since
nuthin has broke yet, I don't have to be indignant about it yet.
He has the book "somewhere", altho if/when he finds it, I don't know how
helpful it would be for the print.
None of this is critical now, since I'm 99.9% sure it is a blown motor, but
goddamm, it would be nice to grok what alladat stuff is for.
--
EA
Got a camera to take pix?
i
No, straight gear head.
>
> Got a camera to take pix?
Good idea, once I get into the 19th century..... :(
--
EA
>
> i
If the DC went into the motor I'd suspect a synchronous machine, but why
in hell you'd need a synchronous motor on a lathe is totally beyond me.
Perhaps it was put in there specifically to confuse the hell out of
_you_, because you're special.
Many applications use a shot of DC to brake an AC motor.
Paul
"Existential Angst" <UNfi...@UNoptonline.net> wrote in message
news:4b6b40cd$0$4994$607e...@cv.net...
>I see a transformer (about 10 lbs mebbe), with a dozen taps going to a
>terminal ditty with two bitty glass fuses; a heavy duty diode *full wave
>rectifier*!! DC???? For what?????
>
>A fancy-shmancy twist handle breakered switch, a semi-normal contactor, and
>some abnormal relay with some kind of timer knob?? timing what???, and
>three little can-type ditties, one in series with each phase wire, about
>3/4" dia x 1" long.
>And another terminal block with a cupla dozen wires on it.
>
Full wave bridge is most likely fo the spindle brake, might put DC to
the motor, but more likely to a coil that pulls in a brake somewhere
in the gear head.
Can ditties might be some kind of surge or spike suppressor.
Thank You,
Randy
Remove 333 from email address to reply.
That would be my guess here, explains the presence of the timer too.
BTW, DC braking is pretty hard on an AC induction motor. All the stored
energy in the rotating parts gets dissipated in the armature, which isn't
built to handle that.
--
Bob Nichols AT comcast.net I am "RNichols42"