DynahoeDave
Electrical
- Dec 14, 2018
- 4
IHi everyone,
I recently acquired a 1960's Bridgeport milling machine. The cross feed has a motor driven feed mechanism.
The motor Nameplate:
Master
Alternating Current Motor
Serial DV6265 Style 245574
Type PA Frame 5217 H/P 1/8
Volts 208-220 Cycles 60 / 50
Amps .7 Phase 1
RPM 1725 / 1425
Code M Temp. Rise Cont 50 C
It has 2 Black #16 AWG wires. Also, 2 blue #18 wires, and a red #18 wire. One of the blue is connected to a 71-90 MFD 110-125V capacitor. Metal can, rubber terminal end with 2 lugs. The other lug is connected to the red wire.
It also has a KB Electronics solid state motor switch [model KB-6] . One line connection goes to the yellow [line] wire of the KB-6. The other line connection goes to one of the black motor wires. The loose blue wire goes to the KB-6 red / start wire. The remaining black wire goes to the KB-6 Blue main wndg wire.
I have this connected to 240VAC line. It is drawing around 4 amps, which is really high for such a small motor, and way over the .7 on the nameplate. I have a clamp on ammeter, and it shows 4amps in the run winding, and a pulse during start in the start winding, and in the capacitor wiring.
I removed one end cover, and the windings do not look discolored, burned, etc. The bearings are good, and all of this is with no load on the motor.
I did a few tests trying to determine if a winding is bad, or somehow they had been swapped or miss wired, as the wiring in the machine was kind of a hack job in places.
I left the black wire connected to one line input. I disconnected the Motor switch. Wired a 100W incandescent in series with each of the 2 windings, and connected the other side of the lamps to neutral, to give it only 120V. Both lights light up nearly full brightness, motor does not turn or buzz. If I momentarily bypass the lamp on the start winding, it spins up, and the other lamp dims, as I would expect. Actually, the start lamp dims also, but not as much. And it will continue to run with the start circuit open. If I then bypass the lamp in the run winding circuit, the motor continues to run, hum gets a little louder, current goes up to about an amp. Obviously, if I were to go to 240, the current would go up to the 4 amps I measured at the start of realizing something isn't right. It almost seems like it would be happy to run on 120VAC - although I don't know if the torque would be there. But with it wired to the KB-6, it doesn't do anything with only 120V applied.
Alll of my wiring description is based on how it was when I got it, so there could be an error in the assumptions. I'm hoping to find someone familiar enough with this sort of motor to confirm / help narrow down anything I'm missing.
[the main [3 phase] motor on the milling machine I got a VFD for, and it's working great]
I recently acquired a 1960's Bridgeport milling machine. The cross feed has a motor driven feed mechanism.
The motor Nameplate:
Master
Alternating Current Motor
Serial DV6265 Style 245574
Type PA Frame 5217 H/P 1/8
Volts 208-220 Cycles 60 / 50
Amps .7 Phase 1
RPM 1725 / 1425
Code M Temp. Rise Cont 50 C
It has 2 Black #16 AWG wires. Also, 2 blue #18 wires, and a red #18 wire. One of the blue is connected to a 71-90 MFD 110-125V capacitor. Metal can, rubber terminal end with 2 lugs. The other lug is connected to the red wire.
It also has a KB Electronics solid state motor switch [model KB-6] . One line connection goes to the yellow [line] wire of the KB-6. The other line connection goes to one of the black motor wires. The loose blue wire goes to the KB-6 red / start wire. The remaining black wire goes to the KB-6 Blue main wndg wire.
I have this connected to 240VAC line. It is drawing around 4 amps, which is really high for such a small motor, and way over the .7 on the nameplate. I have a clamp on ammeter, and it shows 4amps in the run winding, and a pulse during start in the start winding, and in the capacitor wiring.
I removed one end cover, and the windings do not look discolored, burned, etc. The bearings are good, and all of this is with no load on the motor.
I did a few tests trying to determine if a winding is bad, or somehow they had been swapped or miss wired, as the wiring in the machine was kind of a hack job in places.
I left the black wire connected to one line input. I disconnected the Motor switch. Wired a 100W incandescent in series with each of the 2 windings, and connected the other side of the lamps to neutral, to give it only 120V. Both lights light up nearly full brightness, motor does not turn or buzz. If I momentarily bypass the lamp on the start winding, it spins up, and the other lamp dims, as I would expect. Actually, the start lamp dims also, but not as much. And it will continue to run with the start circuit open. If I then bypass the lamp in the run winding circuit, the motor continues to run, hum gets a little louder, current goes up to about an amp. Obviously, if I were to go to 240, the current would go up to the 4 amps I measured at the start of realizing something isn't right. It almost seems like it would be happy to run on 120VAC - although I don't know if the torque would be there. But with it wired to the KB-6, it doesn't do anything with only 120V applied.
Alll of my wiring description is based on how it was when I got it, so there could be an error in the assumptions. I'm hoping to find someone familiar enough with this sort of motor to confirm / help narrow down anything I'm missing.
[the main [3 phase] motor on the milling machine I got a VFD for, and it's working great]