Faulty lathe motor

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DanJ

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19 Apr 2018
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milton keynes
Hi im the new guy :D

I have recently been getting into woodworking and have inherited a lathe from my Granddad. However after a few minutes the motor tripped the board. There is a short somewhere but im pretty rubbish at electronics so any ideas would be great.
I have checked the main power cable and it is fine so im guessing the short is internal somewhere.

Many thanks in advance for any help

here is the info
motor.jpg
 

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Their should be a capacitor some where under a bulge like cover, its most likely to be the problem if its bulged then its defiantly the problem.
Replacement from eBay post a picture if you are stuck.

Pete
 
Hi there , thanks for the help.

im not sure which one is the capacitor , but i cant see any bulges or damage to either

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You will need to open them up to find the capacitors, I should have said that.

Pete
 
Looks like it, the next thing to do is pull it out and find what value it is.
You will have to cut/desolder the wires, but don’t worry it doesn’t matter which way round they go.
Post a picture and I will point you in the right direction for a replacement.

Pete
 
Ive got it out of the case but i see no markings on it

5.jpg


Do i need to remove black epoxy looking stuff from the top ?
 

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The value is usually on the side, you are a bit stuffed if it hasn't got one, I would ring a local motor rewinders they should be able to advise/supply you with a replacement.

Pete
 
10 µ F440VRMS = 10 micro farad 440v now you can buy new ones. :)
electrolytic do have a directionality, but as they are operating on AC not DC it doesn't matter as pete has said.
 
Well i replaced the capacitor that looked like it had possibly been damaged , but it still tripped the fuse. I then replaced the second capacitor, but still the same problem.
 
Perhaps you need a 16 amp supply. I had something similar happening and all I had to do was replace one of the mcbs in the fuse box with a slightly different one.

Sent from my SM-G900F using Tapatalk
 
Is there a clicking/ticking sound when you run the motor? If so could be a sticky or damaged starter switch.

At that motor size it should be fine on a normal circuit. Just to be sure though, have you tried on another circuit in the house, might be that your MCB is very sensitive.

Do you have a multimeter?, might be worth checking for a ground fault too.
 
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