Maui
Well-known member
I have a vintage 1/4 horsepower single phase motor that is used to power a Hook-Eye knife sharpener. The guy I bought it from told me that it doesn't work, but everything is there. It doesn't appear to be missing any parts, and the motor shaft turns freely. You can spin it with your fingers easily. When I plugged it in it with the switch in the "OFF" position it immediately tripped the in-line breaker on the outlet. I checked the connections between the power cord and switch, found a few loose connections, squared everything up, and the same thing still happened. I removed the power cord and switch that came with it and put them aside, and wired up a brand new power cord, plug and switch that I know is wired correctly and works properly - and I verified this with my ohm meter. Again, I plugged it in with the switch in the "OFF" position so there should not be a completed circuit, and it immediately tripped the breaker again. To make sure the outlet wasn't the problem I plugged my bench top drill press into the same outlet and when I turned it on it fired right up like normal. I checked for connections to ground from the common lead and the hot lead and found none.
I am truly puzzled. How can a motor trip the breaker with the properly wired switch turned OFF??
I am truly puzzled. How can a motor trip the breaker with the properly wired switch turned OFF??







