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Model 397.1949 help

dcr83

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Aug 21, 2025
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5
I got this from my grandfathers garage but switch is broken. What replacement switches will work. Does not need to be OEM just fit and work.
 

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Oregon Dave

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It's a craftsman; you should be able to access the parts diagram/list on your dd/phone - ponder how your grandfather would have approached this situation.
 

RTM

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The Craftsman OEM list says that was made by Delco products or Paramount/alllegretti & company who continue the Delco design.

If you turn it over and look at the switch you can see if it's a single pole where it switches only one wire or a double pole where it switches both wires. If you then look for a switch that can handle a motor of that capacity listed on your name plate you should be good to go. Can't see enough of your switch to tell how that's mounted, but a rectangular panel seems safe.

Since it's set up for 115 or 230 volt you should probably get a double pole switch regardless of which voltage you are running.

The vintage machinery site


Shows a manual with parts list


And part #31 looks like your switch.

If you Google that part number, an early result brings you back to GJ, (any good tool search brings you back here), where someone claims to have fixed his switch, which may save you from going nuts trying to replace it.


Other links may tell you how others replaced it

It's amazing what you can find between bites of an apple
 
OP
D

dcr83

Member
Joined
Aug 21, 2025
Messages
5
The Craftsman OEM list says that was made by Delco products or Paramount/alllegretti & company who continue the Delco design.

If you turn it over and look at the switch you can see if it's a single pole where it switches only one wire or a double pole where it switches both wires. If you then look for a switch that can handle a motor of that capacity listed on your name plate you should be good to go. Can't see enough of your switch to tell how that's mounted, but a rectangular panel seems safe.

Since it's set up for 115 or 230 volt you should probably get a double pole switch regardless of which voltage you are running.

The vintage machinery site


Shows a manual with parts list


And part #31 looks like your switch.

If you Google that part number, an early result brings you back to GJ, (any good tool search brings you back here), where someone claims to have fixed his switch, which may save you from going nuts trying to replace it.


Other links may tell you how others replaced it

It's amazing what you can find between bites of an apple
Here is a picture of what I have left this is how I found it.
 

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RTM

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Location
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Here is a picture of what I have left this is how I found it.
That first pic looks like 3 wires going into the switch. Im guessing here, but hopefully an expert will step in. Fig 6 in the manual shows that as a 115v set up, guessing one line goes to the start windings, the other the run windings.

The link to the Google results above (from green tractor). https://www.greentractortalk.com/th...1248&nested_view=1&sortby=oldest#post-3701248

says that it's just a single pole switch w two terminals on one side for spade connection, so in theory you you would wire all three wires together, plug it in and run, if the start relay works ok.

Also links to a different grinder manual with a wiring diagram which supposedly uses the same switch. Probably similar generation, but only 1/3HP vs your 1/2HP.
 

FrankLee

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This may help.

 
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