Plumcrazy
Member
Greetings,
I have been looking to buy a drill press now for quite some time. I didn't want to buy a new one made with lots of plastic. I have been searching Craigslist, ebay, etc and it seemed that everything I have seen was more than I thought it should be. While coming home from running an errand last weekend I happened across a yard sale. They had a a circa 1975 Craftsman drill press. It appeares to be in great shape. It has been modified by its previous owner to reduce the quill speeds and some sort of reversing switch was added. The son in law of the deceased owner didn't know much about it other than "it needs a motor or you can spin the quill by hand" to get the machine to start. I paid $75.00 and we loaded it in the truck. I damaged the reversing switch on it's ride home as the switch was in pieces inside its housing.
I put the switch back together and plugged the machine in. When I turned the motor on it started spinning very slowly and sounded rather labored. When I hit the reversing switch, "pop" it threw the breaker. I unplugged the machine and decided it was a job for another day. That day has come.
I really don't much about AC motors so I thought I'd ask here
It is a Dayton capacitor start 110/230v 1725 RPM motor. Visually it looks like it's the same vintage as the press but I really don't know. I'm not sure what I should do next. I suspect the reversing switch was not reassembled correctly and is the cause of the breaker opening. The switch wiring is somewhat hardwired to the motor. I haven't disassembled anything yet so I really don't know. I have a healthy respect for electricity but I'm not afraid of it. I was thinking I'd open the motor up and remove the switch and test the motor by itself to eliminate a variable. Are these motors rebuildable or am I better off replacing it? Any other suggestions? Need more info?
Regards
Craig
I have been looking to buy a drill press now for quite some time. I didn't want to buy a new one made with lots of plastic. I have been searching Craigslist, ebay, etc and it seemed that everything I have seen was more than I thought it should be. While coming home from running an errand last weekend I happened across a yard sale. They had a a circa 1975 Craftsman drill press. It appeares to be in great shape. It has been modified by its previous owner to reduce the quill speeds and some sort of reversing switch was added. The son in law of the deceased owner didn't know much about it other than "it needs a motor or you can spin the quill by hand" to get the machine to start. I paid $75.00 and we loaded it in the truck. I damaged the reversing switch on it's ride home as the switch was in pieces inside its housing.
I put the switch back together and plugged the machine in. When I turned the motor on it started spinning very slowly and sounded rather labored. When I hit the reversing switch, "pop" it threw the breaker. I unplugged the machine and decided it was a job for another day. That day has come.
I really don't much about AC motors so I thought I'd ask here
It is a Dayton capacitor start 110/230v 1725 RPM motor. Visually it looks like it's the same vintage as the press but I really don't know. I'm not sure what I should do next. I suspect the reversing switch was not reassembled correctly and is the cause of the breaker opening. The switch wiring is somewhat hardwired to the motor. I haven't disassembled anything yet so I really don't know. I have a healthy respect for electricity but I'm not afraid of it. I was thinking I'd open the motor up and remove the switch and test the motor by itself to eliminate a variable. Are these motors rebuildable or am I better off replacing it? Any other suggestions? Need more info?
Regards
Craig