Quote Originally Posted by JAZZCNC View Post
You didn't read what I said about my machine carefully enough.! . . . .My PERSONAL machine doesn't even have a water pump it's feed straight from the tap and out into the drain. Wasteful YES but I don't cut long jobs on it often so rarely turn on the water. It runs fine for 30-40 mins without water.
It's been this way for over 2yrs and the spindle is over 6yrs old so it's not doing any significant harm to it. I've got woodworking machines out in the field that are 10yrs + old used 8-10hrs daily and still using the same spindle. They are robust spindles for woodworking.

My comments regards 20Ltr containers are for the machines I build. These need to be capable of long periods of use which are unknown to me so that's why I use 20ltrs of water. Also the containers are simple and easy to empty or find if need replacing.

However, if don't believe what I'm telling you then crack on and build an overly complex system so you can sleep easy.!! . . . . I don't give a Stuff.
LOL. Don’t take it to heart son.

I take it you don’t know thermal effects on magnets. Heat breaks down the magnetic properties meaning that the motor is having to work harder to produce the same number of rpms. Outwardly it may appear to be unaffected by the heat but I can assure you, motors that exceed their thermal capacity are going to get damaged.

The Electronics course I was on actually showed this in a practical demonstration. They tested the motor, showing the amps needed to drive the motor at a specific RPM. Then they disassembled the motor and shoved the magnets into an oven. I can’t remember how hot or how long it was because this was back in 1985.

Anyhoo, they air cooled the magnets (because artificially cooling magnets actually strengthens them) and put them back in the motor and then run the motor back up to the same RPM.

The motor did it but it struggled. It was drawing a higher voltage and amperage to run at the same speed. It was pointed out that this would eventually cause a domino effect downstream by stressing the power supply and control circuits... and ironically at that point the smoothing capacitor on the demo blew the top off and left a hole through the ceiling, scaring the crap out of us because we were sitting bunched up around the desk.

You may be an expert at CNC stuff but I’ve been playing and working with electronics and electro mechanical stuff since the 70’s. Just because it doesn’t seem damaged doesn’t mean damage isn’t occurring.