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Ivan Vegvary Ivan Vegvary is offline
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Default SOLVED!!? Electric motor, again, help

Removed motor from cement mixer. Chiseled off chunks of splattered concrete
from motor. Used a bearing puller to remove crusted on small pulley from
motor shaft. While tapping on the end of the puller the motor shaft
suddenly freed up and was able to turn.
Plugged it in and it runs fine. Fairly quiet!

Question: Tear it down further to look at bearings .. or .. use as is.

BTW motor is: Dayton, 1HP, Cap. Start, Therm. Protected model 6K562F. Took
a lot of scrubbing to get that information. Bearings = Ball Note on
nameplate says that they are permanently lubricated and require no further
lubrication. Does this mean they are sealed and water cannot get in?

What would you guys do? Use it as is (while cautiously waiting for bearing
noise to develop) or, make it a new project.

Thanks for all the previous advice.

Ivan Vegvary
"Ivan Vegvary" wrote in message
...
Okay, I finally took the electric motor (3/4 hp, capacitor start) off the
cement mixer. This is the motor that got flooded under water for about a
day or two (about 4 months ago).

Shaft will not turn. What's my next step? Tap on it with a soft mallet?
Try to take the end caps off? Move the shaft axially?

If you've done this, please advise. If you think it's a lost cause, tell
me.

Thanks, Ivan Vegvary