NOW we're getting somewhere!
I rolled into the shop about two in the afternoon, having had some prior engagements on my schedule, but with the intention to finally get the motor back into place and wired.
I'd gotten the motor back from the shop last Friday, but was unable to clear enough time to do much with it. They did a great job, and while it was a tad more than I was hoping to spend, they gave it a full workover, including new bearings.
But before I could attend that, I needed to patch up the flexy conduit, and double-check the wires in there were okay.
Turns out the only real damage was to the outer plastic sleeve- which was old enough it cracked when bent too far. The inner steel armor held up nicely, and the wires were fine.
The ends are older, and likely obsolete, fittings, but I was able to extract the sealing ring from the bad end, bandsaw off the 3" or so of damage, and carefully resinstall everything.
But first, the motor!
New bearings, dipped and baked rotor, new field and armature wires, and they checked the comm and brushes. I didn't know paint was on the agenda, but I ain't complainin'.
I cleaned the junction box, and snipped a sort of "gasket" from some of the leftover tool-drawer liner...
And fixed it in place with fresh bolts and washers.
Bolted on the pivot/hanger...
And with remarkably little cursing, got it hung up, the belt installed, and the tension adjuster bolted in place.
Since the spindle pulley was now in it's final resting place, I was able to slide on the jackshaft pulley, and with the aid of a piece of string and a weight, align it to the spindle and lock it down.
This one's a taper-lock pulley, likely an aftermarket, as the few diagrams I've seen online- including the paper one glued inside the door- show a stepped pulley. Two sets of two pulleys, to give two different speed ranges- one normal and one slower, for more torque.
I had again used a buddy's heat-shrink printer thingy, and made a new set of ID tags for the new wires.
The shop had put their tags out at the end of the long wires- not unreasonably- but in my case, I wanted to snip about 4" off each one, so they'd fit better inside the junction box. Anyway, simple matter of double-checking, sliding, shrinking and snipping.
I similarly relabeled the wires in the conduit, slid that into place, and got it connected up at both ends.
With the wires wire-nutted in place and in proper order... it was time to test this puppy!
And it works like a champ! There's a touch of vibration, probably from the big iron step pulleys, but plenty smooth enough, and at this point, with just the motor and jackshaft, damn near silent. The motor-generator pair makes more noise.
Throw the two spindle belts on...
And take
that for a spin:
Smooth, quiet.... A
significant difference from the as-delivered sound level. The original setup didn't "howl", but as noted earlier, it made more noise than I thought it should.
All this was a nontrivial extra expense and expenditure of time, but it was worth every penny. I'm actually wondering now, if the motor-generator pair couldn't stand a set of bearings...
All the way up to top speed- in this range, about 1600 RPM- and still nearly no noise save for the M-G setup. I mean, it's not library-silent, but the fans on the VFDs on some of my other machines, make more noise than this spindle and drive.
And finally, the back covers can go back on, more or less for good at this point.
Over the course of the day, I snuck in a few other little fiddly bits as well. One item was the electrical enclosure had no latch- it used two bolts to hold the door shut. I'd imagine that's in part to keep operators from poking around in there, but in my case, I didn't like having to get a wrench when I wanted to fiddle with it.
So I found a hunk of 1" 'looneymum, gouged a curvy bit into it, drilled and tapped it...
Gave it a quick knurl with a handheld knurling tool...
Parted it off, faced and chamfered it...
And somehow ended up with two of them.
These simply go in place of the bolts, and let you open the enclosure, if necessary, by hand. There's a gasket on the door, to give some 'crush', so the knobs are unlikely to vibrate out.
I also bolted the back cover... er, back on, including adding a middle bolt at the top edge, as the cover tended to "oil can' a little, and rumble slightly under vibration. I had to use the large washer there, as there wasn't enough depth to the cabinet edge to put a screw through both.
I may wind up putting a screw or two at the bottom, too.
And finally-
finally!- I remembered to cap the sump drain.
I'm still not sure if I'll ever use flood coolant or oil- this thing doesn't have enough splash guarding- but I figured if I ever do, it'd be just my luck I'd have forgotten I'd never capped it....
after I dumped two gallons of oil into it.
Stand by, we're nearin' the end!
Doc.