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IndustryArena Forum > CNC Electronics > Servo Motors / Drives > Mill motor challenge fun times - what type of motor is this ?
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  1. #1
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    Mill motor challenge fun times - what type of motor is this ?

    I have an Emco milling attachment for my Emco Maximat V10

    When I got it the electronics were listed as dodgy and sure enough turning it on it caught fire (flame2) :tired:

    I've replaced the lathe motor with a spare AC servo I have here - not wanting to get into the original burned control unit nor fork out for a new motor for the mill I'm keen top learn about the motor there is on it - maybe I can use a spare drive (granite devices VSD-XE) I have here to run it ?

    It has 4 wires coming from it - is this something easy to a. figure out what it is ? and if it is easy to figure out b. easy to drive/run ?

    Pics here:

    http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6211/...05480ca9_b.jpg
    http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6095/...6e1f69a0_b.jpg
    http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6101/...326833e9_b.jpg

    http://www.talkfestool.com/vb/member...aximat-v10.jpg

  2. #2
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    nick mulder

    The motor that is standard on those machines is just a AC motor that runs at it's rated RPM, the gear box controls the spindle RPM

    Both the Main spindle & the Milling attachment, you should be able to put a regular plug on & run them, Look at the tag on the motors they should be 230V

    The main spindle AC motor, take it to a motor rebuilder, & have them check it, The starter caps could be all that is needed to be replaced

    The may be 3phase, But most of these machines all had single phase motors, Just look at the motor Tag & it will tell you what you have
    Mactec54

  3. #3
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    nick mulder

    Take the back off were your switches are if there is a cap in there like this drawing you have a Single Phase motor
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Emco V10P wiring.png  
    Mactec54

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by mactec54 View Post
    nick mulder

    The motor that is standard on those machines is just a AC motor that runs at it's rated RPM, the gear box controls the spindle RPM

    Both the Main spindle & the Milling attachment, you should be able to put a regular plug on & run them, Look at the tag on the motors they should be 230V

    The main spindle AC motor, take it to a motor rebuilder, & have them check it, The starter caps could be all that is needed to be replaced

    The may be 3phase, But most of these machines all had single phase motors, Just look at the motor Tag & it will tell you what you have
    Single phase input but the mill motor has 1 ground and 3 other wires.

    Motor tag isn't on the motor but I can tell you all about the lovely pins that held it in place (no idea how many previous owners)

    I'm happy with the motor I have on the main spindle now, its much more powerful than the stock version (yes, I'll be careful I don't ruin the drivetrain)

    The main control is burned, there are caps in there - but no idea what ... I had to wheel the whole thing quick smart out of the garage into the driveway then deal with it, as simply removing power didn't stop the flames.

    Motor rebuilder sounds like the go - or maybe an Emco maximat circuit diagram.

    I know my other mill has start and run caps that switch with a centrifugal set up, I thought maybe thats how the four wires work - but nothing like that in here ...

  5. #5
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    Three wires plus gnd on a 1ph motor would be non reversable type.
    Did the controller that went up in smoke feed the motor? if so it may have been a VFD of some kind, if so the motor would be 3 ph, and if there is no centrifugal actuator on the armature may confirm 3ph.
    Al.
    CNC, Mechatronics Integration and Custom Machine Design

    “Logic will get you from A to B. Imagination will take you everywhere.”
    Albert E.

  6. #6
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    4 wires to motor = 3 phase. Likely a VFD like Al said. The input to the the VFD is 1 phase.

    The "electronics caught on fire"; that migth be:
    - Driving a too large motor with a too small VFD (without overload detection)
    - Damaged motor (again without overload detection)

    Al, "Three wires plus gnd on a 1ph motor would be non reversable type."
    I have never ever seen that so far, could you explain if you don't mind?

    Hub
    - Overheating (not good enough driver heat management)
    - Other (many) possible faults....
    Current build: http://www.cnczone.com/forums/diy-cnc-router-table-machines/264838-new-machine-desing-quot-cnm13-quot.html

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by hub View Post
    Al, "Three wires plus gnd on a 1ph motor would be non reversable type."
    I have never ever seen that so far, could you explain if you don't mind?
    ...
    For reversal, usually both ends of both windings are brought out, 4 wires.
    If the motor is made uni-directional, the 'common' end of each winding is connected internally and just the common conductor brought out, this leaves two ends, one for the start winding one for the run, 3 conductors in all.
    Al.
    CNC, Mechatronics Integration and Custom Machine Design

    “Logic will get you from A to B. Imagination will take you everywhere.”
    Albert E.

  8. #8
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    nick mulder

    Here is a parts PDF that you can get from this site, the PDF was to big to down load here
    just look up your model, it shows a little of the wiring for the mill head

    EMCO Hobby Machine Instruction Manuals and Spare Part Lists

    None of these machines had VFD for motor control, unless someone put a VFD on a 3 phase machine, which then could be run on a VFD

    If they had 3 Phase on your machine as you will see in the parts manual, They have different switches, & a starter for the main power On switch,

    The switches on your machine are for single phase

    They have very simple wiring, on/off forward/reverse nothing more to it, so not sure what the fire was all about, somebody been playing & did not get it wired right
    Mactec54

  9. #9
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    Arrow

    Putting on my fire investigator cap the burned control unit appears to be a large cap, and the rest is mostly plain old mechanical switching and nothing substantial electrically that I can figure out ... If it's of interest the lathe motor has 7 wires, but I'm ok with the servo I have on it now so no need to fix that - BUT I found another cap in the pile of bits that came with the lathe, its smaller and has that motor start/run kinda look to it:

    5uF 250V

    (the mill wasn't connected for the flame fun)

    ....and also - I don't know why I didn't find this earlier:
    "OK, I've got my manual in front of me now, and it looks like I can clarify everything to the point of absolute opacity.

    One diagram is for the V10P. For the vertical head motor, single phase, 60 cycle, it shows: Black, Blue, and Brown. The capacitor is between the Black and the Brown. An adjoining drawing shows a Yellow-Green ground wire in the cable, also....

    ...Each of the two motors has it's own separate capacitor, and there are no centrifigal switches...the caps stay in the circuit all the time."
    MAXIMAT V10 milling attachment - The Home Shop Machinist & Machinist's Workshop Magazine's BBS

    and also discussion about the cap value:

    Permanent split capacitor motor question - Page 2 - The Home Shop Machinist & Machinist's Workshop Magazine's BBS

    But it's discussing a 110VAC model and a 50uF cap, which they think is too high - I'm in the land of 230.9 V - shall I just wire up that 5uF cap between black and brown then um, phase to Blue then hmmmm, neutral and earth to green/yellow ?

    Does this sound electrically safe ? I'll wear welders gloves, a facemask and jodhpurs when I probe its bits with a DMM

  10. #10
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    Do not connect neutral AND earth to the same point, you should have around 240 and neutral.
    But the post you point to mentions yellow/green as a conductor which as per another post for a ROC machine here it seems they used this colour as a conductor, although this being a European machine I would be very surprised if they did this.
    The voltage does not affect the cap value, only the working voltage, as the winding inductance remains the same.
    What is the seven wires you mention? I though it only had four?
    If it is 1ph and does not have a cent. sw. then it is Cap run type.
    Was this a first time hook up when it caught fire?
    Al.
    CNC, Mechatronics Integration and Custom Machine Design

    “Logic will get you from A to B. Imagination will take you everywhere.”
    Albert E.

  11. #11
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    Thanks for the link to the parts list...

    Saves me from forking out 25quid for one !

    the pic here shows the milling motor:

    http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6219/...c174098a_b.jpg

    '16' has two listings for the 'motor FFD' type: 8uF 300V and 20uF 330V
    and then '16' again under 'motor garvens' type: 20uF 330V

    These are brands ?

    The control in that .pdf is a newer type than mine - pretty swish looking !

    In 4 years of manual machining I've never needed reverse - not sure if that means I'm doing things properly or theres something I know nothing about

    Shall I still give that 5uF cap a whirl ?

  12. #12
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    5µf might be a tad low, but all that will happen is it will be slow at starting, but if not connected to anything in the way of load, it should start.
    If cap run then both winding may be identical, so as long as you identify the common, you may not have any problems.
    Al.
    CNC, Mechatronics Integration and Custom Machine Design

    “Logic will get you from A to B. Imagination will take you everywhere.”
    Albert E.

  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by Al_The_Man View Post
    Do not connect neutral AND earth to the same point, you should have around 240 and neutral.
    Al.
    So I connect earth to the chassis ?

    Quote Originally Posted by Al_The_Man View Post
    What is the seven wires you mention? I though it only had four?
    If it is 1ph and does not have a cent. sw. then it is Cap run type.
    Was this a first time hook up when it caught fire?
    seven wires are for the lathe motor, not the milling motor which is four wires, which is what I'm interested in - I shouldn't have mentioned it.

    Pretty sure smart money is on cap run type.

    First time switch on for me after I bought it for cheap 'with electrical issues' - no idea who or what anyone else had tried to do in there beforehand - I thought the worst that could happen would be a fire and I'd have to replace the motor and electronics ... Go figure

    I'm pretty keen to get it running forward only in the simplest way possible - alternative option is to couple a DC servo I have here onto the current motors rotor shaft and away I go, but it would be nicer to have it going itself...

  14. #14
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    Connect earth to the motor frame or the yellow/green if it shows continuity to the frame.
    The part I mentioned earlier for non reversible motors applied to cap start. If cap run and your windings ARE identical, you could actually reverse it by swapping windings.
    Al.
    CNC, Mechatronics Integration and Custom Machine Design

    “Logic will get you from A to B. Imagination will take you everywhere.”
    Albert E.

  15. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by Al_The_Man View Post
    5µf might be a tad low, but all that will happen is it will be slow at starting, but if not connected to anything in the way of load, it should start.
    If cap run then both winding may be identical, so as long as you identify the common, you may not have any problems.
    Al.
    Load like a crapheap of grease in the gearbox ? I was expecting oil ...

    Which motor type am I meant to be reading up on:

    Single-phase induction motors : AC MOTORS

    permanent split or the 3 phase fed single over two coils type with it's 'counter rotating magnetic field phasors'

    I identify the common how ? and the common then tells me to do what with what ?

    Thanks for your help by the way - much appreciated

  16. #16
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    Assuming this is a cap run motor with identical windings then one leads should show the same resistance from one lead to the other two.
    This lead would then be the common and one other would connect to the live or hot and the other to the series cap, the other end of which would also connect to the hot.
    Search 1ph cap run motors.
    In your link it is permanent split cap motor.
    Al.
    CNC, Mechatronics Integration and Custom Machine Design

    “Logic will get you from A to B. Imagination will take you everywhere.”
    Albert E.

  17. #17
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    this is what I'm reading:

    http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6055/...abd6d36954.jpg

    do I have it correct ?

    (and earth to chassis)

  18. #18
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    Yes, as long as the two motor wires you have connected to the cap have the same resistance to common then you should have lift off.
    BTW, do you have access to a clamp-on ammeter?
    Al.
    CNC, Mechatronics Integration and Custom Machine Design

    “Logic will get you from A to B. Imagination will take you everywhere.”
    Albert E.

  19. #19
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    maybe at work yeh, someone will have one (theatre lighting) ... checking for smoke before it gets out again ?

  20. #20
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    I see what you're saying is the same as drawing on the left here:

    http://www.industrial-electronics.com/image/12-49.jpg

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