tailshaft56
Well-known member
I could be wrong but I seem to remember some power tools used come with Universal moter which would run on ac or dc.
As old as the paint and nameplate are, I go with the 100+ years ago power theory!
As far as the pizzing contest over AC/DC "Alternating Current/Voltage, I find the conversation interesting but looks like a bunch of Fools trying to be the Top Rooster in the Hen House!
Are any of you guys actual Electrical Power Engineers?
I could be wrong but I seem to remember some power tools used come with Universal moter which would run on ac or dc.
I like the discussions, you can always learn something from it, as anything goes on the internet, filter it and take it in with a grain of salt. That is how people learn from discussion and collaborations of ideas. I am pretty sure there are some real power engineers here and there and probably everywhere. Doesn't matter, if they are not contributing they are just as dead to me as a doorknob in some cow's ****, just saying. Only people that don't filter and process information is the follower of cults and brainwashed zombies.
is it a 3 phase DC? like it mentioned on the nameplate? Something I have noticed on some ebay motors I am looking at lately.... just curious if this is like the BLDC thing.

Well you sure did spark up a conversation.
I'm still trying to find where you saw in the OP's motor nameplate indicating any value for phase.
The phase field on the OP's motor nameplate is blank as I would expect for that vintage motor. Transistors weren't even invented in that day. BLDC technology occurred 70+ years later than the OP’s motor was built.....

If you look closely at the pic, it appears someone etched a 3 in the phase field...this is what has sparked this thread....![]()
DC doesn't have a waveform - it has neither pure sinusoidal or simulated waves, regardless of their shape. DC is a flat line on a scope. "Phases" are a reference to the various waves' relationship to each other - Alternating Currents have a sinusoidal wave.
Again, phase has no place when talking about Direct Current.
Making the conversation drift into a conversation (argument?) about various conversions of AC to DC, AC to DC to AC, DC to AC, etc. is not clarifying things, and it doesn't make the above facts different.
125VDC is commonly used for control voltage in low, medium and high voltage switchgear - used in power generation and distribution. The reason for DC is to allow battery backup for the control system so they can still operate the switchgear in the event of a power outage - kind of important if you want to get the power turned back on, or remove a load from the system before restoring power.
This 125VDC is generally not used anywhere else in industry, commercial or residential that I am aware of.