I want to first thank everyone who helped me out in figuring out the material used on different motor. As always GJ members provide sound advise and willingly share their knowledge and experience.
I am currently in the process of rebuilding a vintage Craftsman 6” belt disc sander. My build thread is here:
www.garagejournal.com
The sander is pulley driven and is powered by a Craftsman 1/2 HP 3450 RPM Capacitor Start Ball Bearing Thermal Protected Motor model #397.19821. The motor was not tested when I purchased the sander and now, I am at the motor part of the rebuild. Before I did anything with the motor, I plugged it in to see if it runs and nothing happened.
No hum, no spin, no smoke, no nothing. I tried to spin the shaft, and nothing happened.
I am asking you guys because I am not an electrician, but I am fairly adept at figuring stuff out. I have not multi meter tested anything yet. Here is what I think I know:
The odd thing for me is that the motor acts like there is no power getting to it. I can replace the cord and see if that changes anything. I am wondering if I can bypass the switch and then the thermal protector to eliminate them as possibilities?
Anyway, that is what I am dealing with.
Worst case, I replace the motor, but I would prefer to keep the vintage motor with the sander.
Thanks in advance.
Jeff
I am currently in the process of rebuilding a vintage Craftsman 6” belt disc sander. My build thread is here:
11b30b4’s Craftsman 103.22500 6” Belt Disc Sander Rebuild
11b30b4’s Craftsman 103.22500 6” Belt Disc Sander Rebuild I picked this sander up at an estate sale this morning for $110.00. I normally would not spend that much on a sander but in my quest to fill my shop with classic Craftsman/ King Seeley tools on pedestal stands and given the scarcity of...
The sander is pulley driven and is powered by a Craftsman 1/2 HP 3450 RPM Capacitor Start Ball Bearing Thermal Protected Motor model #397.19821. The motor was not tested when I purchased the sander and now, I am at the motor part of the rebuild. Before I did anything with the motor, I plugged it in to see if it runs and nothing happened.
No hum, no spin, no smoke, no nothing. I tried to spin the shaft, and nothing happened.
I am asking you guys because I am not an electrician, but I am fairly adept at figuring stuff out. I have not multi meter tested anything yet. Here is what I think I know:
- No spin with a hum normally indicates a bad capacitor but I am not hearing a hum and a hand spin of the shift does nothing to run the motor.
- After opening up the motor I noticed two of the wires had bare spots. I spliced and fixed these two wires with 16 gauge silicone lead wires.
- Retesting showed no change.
- Possible issues could be:
- bad switch
- bad thermal protector
- bad capacitor
- bad windings
- bad power cord
- short elsewhere in motor
- an evil wizard has cast a spell of disenchantment on the motor.
The odd thing for me is that the motor acts like there is no power getting to it. I can replace the cord and see if that changes anything. I am wondering if I can bypass the switch and then the thermal protector to eliminate them as possibilities?
Anyway, that is what I am dealing with.
Worst case, I replace the motor, but I would prefer to keep the vintage motor with the sander.
Thanks in advance.
Jeff