Re: Spindle motor problems
I would check the filter unit as it is designed to short out high frequency feed back up the mains and a componenet could be shorting to earth(capacitor)
Peter
Re: Spindle motor problems
I had a similar problem with my milling machine. Are you absolutely sure it's the machine not something else causing the fusing? It turned out mine was tripping because the outside light was faulty, so every time the cat walked past it...
Re: Spindle motor problems
are there brushes in the motor, if so check they're not on their last legs.
Re: Spindle motor problems
Hi Peter,
The filter is the only thing on the machine that hasn't been changed. Usually if there is anything with a faulty board, they show physical sigs of failing, but this looks perfect - as new.
I will have to see if I can get a filter board for this machine - can't go back to Warco as we are in a bit of a battle with them over the useless machine they had sold me. Do you - or anyone else reading this thread - have any idea where I could find a board to replace this one?
Regards, GeoffB
Re: Spindle motor problems
Jonathan,
No it is the machine that's doing the tripping - everything else that runs off the circuit is fine and has been for all time that they have been run from the ring main. I have two different circuits/rings in the workshop on differentr trips in the main consumer unit, but this problem trips the main trip, not just the circuit trip. It is only when this machine is running - the lathe or compressor or whatever else has no problem.
Regards,
GeoffB
Re: Spindle motor problems
Hi,
The motor is brand new - literally 12-14 operating hours old. We had this problem with the old motor fitted - and that had only a few running hours on the clock as the machine had not been run due to it's many mechanical and stepper problems. The old motor had been checked as OK by a motor rewinding company and it had new brushes fitted. When we had the problem, we fitted a new motor, but that had the same problem - changing the driver board and partially isolating the E-Stop seemed to cure the problem for some 12 operating hours, then it started happening all over again - there is no arcing from the motor and it runs just fine - until the "popping" of the trip.
Regards,
GeoffB
Re: Spindle motor problems
Just a thought but does the main board have a elcb fitted as its not normal to trip the main unit and not the local mcb.
If it is a elcb then that is more likely that it is the filter!!
Id you have an ammeter I would try to measure any earth leakage present.
(just be careful how you measure it though)
Peter
Re: Spindle motor problems
Hello Peter,
Thanks, but I'm not sure on this one. We have been thinking on this and the motor is starting to sound ropey as it did with the original motor, which has set us thinking back to the motor itself.
Anyway, since last night the engineer has come back to me and said that the filter is nothing to do with the spindle driver board. The feed to the driver board is seperate - to check this, we took out the inline fuse to the filter and the only difference that it made was that the tacho readout on the front of the machine didn't work, which is not a problem as the speed is controlled from the computer. The motor ran up just the same. so the filter is nothing to do with the motor.
Now the motor only runs for around 15-20 secs before it pops and as I said, it sounds like a two stroke on misfire!.
I checked in the top of the motor whilst it was running and it's like a firework display in there - which points to possible brushes problem (as i2i suggested earlier) which I couldn't believe as the motor is a brand new unit - only 12-14 hours on the clock - that was why we were looking for other causes. I will check the brushes in the morning.
The only thing that is different on this machine from its original set up (in the spindle motor area), is that we are running it the opposite direction as we have a toothed belt drive to achieve 1 to 1 as opposed to 1.85: that was on original gearing to get the spindle speed up to higher revs for the small cutters we are using. As we've taken out the gears, consequently the motor runs "backwards".
As far as we knew, DC motors run in either direction - but maybe we're worng and it is this that's causing problems and taking out the brushes? Does anyone know?
Regards,
GeoffB
Re: Spindle motor problems
Some motors are designed to run in one direction only and do not take kindly to the reverse direction ie the brushes have bed in in one way and could stick if run in the opposite.
A heavily sparking brush will cause the motor to consume more current due to the negative resistance region of the arc caused at the commutator, also bad for the life of the motor.
Try it running in the opposite direction and see how long it stays running.
Peter