Nealcrenshaw
Well-known member
I'm thinking some kind of potentiometer or some kind of resistance that i can plug the grinder into,but i can seem to piece it together in my mind. 


Dimmer switches, potientiometers, router speed controls, etc. will all work only with universal brush type motors. You will burn up an induction motor trying any of these on it. A variable frequency drive is the only way I know to control the speed of a motor like this.



1. Sell it
2. Buy this
works good with hand die grinders, routers, drills and more
These are brush-type motors.
Using a dimmer will destroy the motor, they make a kit (I have one, I'll post a pic when I find it) that you have to wire internally that will give you variable speed (wired similarly to how a drill switch is wired).whats your point? if you regulate the amount of voltage going in, it reduces the speed of the tool you are using. not going to hurt it at all
The point is, you have absolutely no idea what you're talking about and giving bad advice... If you reduce the amount of voltage going into a split-phase induction motor, it will overheat and burn up.whats your point? if you regulate the amount of voltage going in, it reduces the speed of the tool you are using. not going to hurt it at all
Recall again that a router is a universal brush-type motor. Bench grinders do not use this type of motor.I picked this up for an expensive router and decided not to try it because I was worried about smoking the motor
whats your point? if you regulate the amount of voltage going in, it reduces the speed of the tool you are using. not going to hurt it at all
Look at the variable frequency drive carefully. Usually, they need to run a 3ph motor to get variable speeds. A regular stone wheel bench grinder isn't a very precise tool. It may not be worth putting much money into modifying it.
Then here you go... http://www.anaconsystems.com/text/eagle1.htmlCorrect, except for the usually part. No VFD that I know of is single phase.
Then here you go... http://www.anaconsystems.com/text/eagle1.html
Old thread, but how would a dimmer switch specifically made for a ceiling fan fit in here? I dont think that ceiling fans have carbon brushes.
http://www.brighthub.com/engineering/electrical/articles/63249.aspx
http://www.smarthome.com/solution29.html
