valvashon
Electrical
- Aug 16, 2018
- 4
Greetings- this is my first post. Hoping that this forum is more helpful than some others.
Short history- I've been interested in electronics since I was little, went to school for TV and engineering, landed a TV station job and moved up to maintenance engineer and satellite truck operator. About two years ago they handed me the building maintenance duties as well.
There was an incredible number of things unfinished or unstarted by our previous building maintenance engineer. If it wasn't easy it didn't get done. Finding new Broan dual shaft vent fan motors was impossible, so the doors to the transformer rooms sat propped open. I finally found a motor rebuilding shop that would do it, so over the past year I have sent them the two dual shaft motors, as well as four other HVAC fan motors (from inside of the VAV units in the ceiling).
Trouble is, their work has been less than stellar. The two dual shaft motors had to go back under warranty for bearing failure within three months (they are back now and doing fire), the first VAV motor I sent in came back reversed in it's cage so it wouldn't mount up properly (I turned that one around myself), the second one I sent in came back reversed in it's cage (I sent that one back), the third one came back fine (we had a spare so the rebuilt one is now the spare) and the fourth one came back and spun backwards when I installed it!
The HVAC VAV motors I have been sending in are three speed (usually set it and forget it with a switch on the side of the unit) single phase units on 277 volts. Small, maybe 1/2 HP or so with rotation speeds between 500 and 1100 RPM or so. All with motor run cap between 5 and 12.5 uF. I'm kind of stuck with this re-builder as I can't find another place that wants to work on small motors. Rebuilding is cheaper plus finding the motor in the correct mounting cage for these 20 year old VAV units is next to impossible.
With the latest one, I was under the impression that it was just bad bearings. When the shop got the motor they said a winding was bad as well. I, of course, was not able to observe the rotation direction of the unit prior to sending it in. When I got it back, I put the squirrel cage on the shaft and the assembly in the mounting housing. Based on the marks on the shaft and the way the fan sits in the housing, it can go on only one direction. These things sit offset in the housing a bit, with the air flow coming out the wider part of the opening. Mounted it in the VAV, hooked it up (including the correct capacitor), set it to the medium speed and powered up. First thing I noticed was that the speed didn't seem to change much if at all with the Hi-Med-Lo switch on the VAV, plus when I went to Hi (I think) there was kind of an odd thump or pop coming from somewhere. Set it to medium speed again and noticed the lack of airflow out of the vents. Put my hand directly on the output and then noticed the lack of air. Shut things down and noticed the backwards rotation as it slowed to a stop (as compared to the "rotation" speed arrow). Spun it the correct direction; powered up and it reversed and spun the wrong direction again. Took it down and hooked it up in the shop and found it still rotating backwards.
Re-builder insisted that this can't happen and that their shop strapped the windings correctly, but offered to have a second look, so I sent it back. My question is this- is it possible to wire it up so it starts backwards? They insist that can't be done, but something determines the rotation.
Also, can you recommend a good small motor re-builder?
Thanks-
Val
Short history- I've been interested in electronics since I was little, went to school for TV and engineering, landed a TV station job and moved up to maintenance engineer and satellite truck operator. About two years ago they handed me the building maintenance duties as well.
There was an incredible number of things unfinished or unstarted by our previous building maintenance engineer. If it wasn't easy it didn't get done. Finding new Broan dual shaft vent fan motors was impossible, so the doors to the transformer rooms sat propped open. I finally found a motor rebuilding shop that would do it, so over the past year I have sent them the two dual shaft motors, as well as four other HVAC fan motors (from inside of the VAV units in the ceiling).
Trouble is, their work has been less than stellar. The two dual shaft motors had to go back under warranty for bearing failure within three months (they are back now and doing fire), the first VAV motor I sent in came back reversed in it's cage so it wouldn't mount up properly (I turned that one around myself), the second one I sent in came back reversed in it's cage (I sent that one back), the third one came back fine (we had a spare so the rebuilt one is now the spare) and the fourth one came back and spun backwards when I installed it!
The HVAC VAV motors I have been sending in are three speed (usually set it and forget it with a switch on the side of the unit) single phase units on 277 volts. Small, maybe 1/2 HP or so with rotation speeds between 500 and 1100 RPM or so. All with motor run cap between 5 and 12.5 uF. I'm kind of stuck with this re-builder as I can't find another place that wants to work on small motors. Rebuilding is cheaper plus finding the motor in the correct mounting cage for these 20 year old VAV units is next to impossible.
With the latest one, I was under the impression that it was just bad bearings. When the shop got the motor they said a winding was bad as well. I, of course, was not able to observe the rotation direction of the unit prior to sending it in. When I got it back, I put the squirrel cage on the shaft and the assembly in the mounting housing. Based on the marks on the shaft and the way the fan sits in the housing, it can go on only one direction. These things sit offset in the housing a bit, with the air flow coming out the wider part of the opening. Mounted it in the VAV, hooked it up (including the correct capacitor), set it to the medium speed and powered up. First thing I noticed was that the speed didn't seem to change much if at all with the Hi-Med-Lo switch on the VAV, plus when I went to Hi (I think) there was kind of an odd thump or pop coming from somewhere. Set it to medium speed again and noticed the lack of airflow out of the vents. Put my hand directly on the output and then noticed the lack of air. Shut things down and noticed the backwards rotation as it slowed to a stop (as compared to the "rotation" speed arrow). Spun it the correct direction; powered up and it reversed and spun the wrong direction again. Took it down and hooked it up in the shop and found it still rotating backwards.
Re-builder insisted that this can't happen and that their shop strapped the windings correctly, but offered to have a second look, so I sent it back. My question is this- is it possible to wire it up so it starts backwards? They insist that can't be done, but something determines the rotation.
Also, can you recommend a good small motor re-builder?
Thanks-
Val