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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#1
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Posted to alt.energy.homepower,alt.engineering.electrical,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics.electromag
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I have a broken pool motor [magnetek y56y] which will cost a bundle to
fix or repair. While doing a search on the web, I found the same model (really cheap) but wired for 280V, instead of the 230 V load that my wiring is supplies. Now, I was thinking of buying the cheap 280V model and installing it instead. Aside from rotating at a different speed and maybe some power inefficiencies, are there any other drawbacks of using the 280V model instead? |
#2
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"Deodiaus" wrote in message
... I have a broken pool motor [magnetek y56y] which will cost a bundle to fix or repair. While doing a search on the web, I found the same model (really cheap) but wired for 280V, instead of the 230 V load that my wiring is supplies. Now, I was thinking of buying the cheap 280V model and installing it instead. Aside from rotating at a different speed and maybe some power inefficiencies, are there any other drawbacks of using the 280V model instead? If it's the same model motor, you might be able to rewire it for your 230V supply. Look at the nameplate or inside the wiring chamber to see if there is a wiring diagram that details wiring connections for different voltages. Barring that, you might search the Mfr's website (if they are still in business) or Google for the make and model of your motor and see if there is any data on it that details the wiring instructions. -- Dave M MasonDG44 at comcast dot net (Just substitute the appropriate characters in the address) Some people are like Slinkies. Not really good for anything, but they bring a smile to your face when pushed down the stairs. |
#3
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On Apr 26, 3:11*pm, Deodiaus wrote:
I have a broken pool motor [magnetek y56y] which will cost a bundle to fix or repair. While doing a search on the web, I found the same model (really cheap) but wired for 280V, instead of the 230 V load that my wiring is supplies. Now, I was thinking of buying the cheap 280V model and installing it instead. *Aside from rotating at a different speed and maybe some power inefficiencies, are there any other drawbacks of using the 280V model instead? BUY IT! You'll thank yourself 10 years from now! The speed diffrence wil be neglegable, the duty-cycle will be such that the motor will enjoy a much longer life... if anything you could step-up RPM by adding pulleys and a drive-belt rather than direct-drive coupled as it is now... The pulley/belts would also minimize start-shock to the pump by softening the inital roll in of the motor... |
#4
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Posted to alt.energy.homepower,alt.engineering.electrical,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics.electromag
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![]() Deodiaus wrote: I have a broken pool motor [magnetek y56y] which will cost a bundle to fix or repair. While doing a search on the web, I found the same model (really cheap) but wired for 280V, instead of the 230 V load that my wiring is supplies. Now, I was thinking of buying the cheap 280V model and installing it instead. Aside from rotating at a different speed and maybe some power inefficiencies, are there any other drawbacks of using the 280V model instead? You mean the 120/208 VAC motor that was for sale on Ebay? -- http://improve-usenet.org/index.html Use any search engine other than Google till they stop polluting USENET with porn and junk commercial SPAM If you have broadband, your ISP may have a NNTP news server included in your account: http://www.usenettools.net/ISP.htm |
#5
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Posted to alt.energy.homepower,alt.engineering.electrical,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics.electromag
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Deodiaus wrote:
I have a broken pool motor [magnetek y56y] which will cost a bundle to fix or repair. While doing a search on the web, I found the same model (really cheap) but wired for 280V, instead of the 230 V load that my wiring is supplies. Now, I was thinking of buying the cheap 280V model and installing it instead. Aside from rotating at a different speed and maybe some power inefficiencies, are there any other drawbacks of using the 280V model instead? are you sure it isn't 208 ? -- http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5" |
#6
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On Apr 26, 6:14*pm, Jamie
t wrote: Deodiaus wrote: I have a broken pool motor [magnetek y56y] which will cost a bundle to fix or repair. While doing a search on the web, I found the same model (really cheap) but wired for 280V, instead of the 230 V load that my wiring is supplies. Now, I was thinking of buying the cheap 280V model and installing it instead. *Aside from rotating at a different speed and maybe some power inefficiencies, are there any other drawbacks of using the 280V model instead? * are you sure it isn't 208 ? --http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5" I'd be suspicious that the 280V was a misreading somehow of 230V. |
#7
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#8
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In Jamie t writes:
are you sure it isn't 208 ? --http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5" I'd be suspicious that the 280V was a misreading somehow of 230V. that sounds more plausible. Or... of 208V. If you have a "three phase" circuit coming into a building, and you run two "hot" wires to your appliance (or motor), the effective voltage you're getting is 208V. There's enough overlap so that a standard 240V appliance such as, say, a larger air conditioner, will work more or less ok on 208V. And vice versa. But there is most assuredely a difference in the two circuits, so for optimal results, you'll want an appliance (or motor) designed for the specific wiring in your facility. -- __________________________________________________ ___ Knowledge may be power, but communications is the key [to foil spammers, my address has been double rot-13 encoded] |
#9
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Posted to alt.energy.homepower,alt.engineering.electrical,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics.electromag
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Jamie wrote:
hr(bob) wrote: On Apr 26, 6:14 pm, Jamie t wrote: Deodiaus wrote: I have a broken pool motor [magnetek y56y] which will cost a bundle to fix or repair. While doing a search on the web, I found the same model (really cheap) but wired for 280V, instead of the 230 V load that my wiring is supplies. Now, I was thinking of buying the cheap 280V model and installing it instead. Aside from rotating at a different speed and maybe some power inefficiencies, are there any other drawbacks of using the 280V model instead? are you sure it isn't 208 ? --http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5" I'd be suspicious that the 280V was a misreading somehow of 230V. that sounds more plausible. I'm a little confused about a 230 volt circuit. In what part of the world does the utility supply 230v? jak |
#11
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Don Kelly wrote:
---------------------------- "jakdedert" wrote in message . .. Jamie wrote: hr(bob) wrote: On Apr 26, 6:14 pm, Jamie t wrote: Deodiaus wrote: I have a broken pool motor [magnetek y56y] which will cost a bundle to fix or repair. While doing a search on the web, I found the same model (really cheap) but wired for 280V, instead of the 230 V load that my wiring is supplies. Now, I was thinking of buying the cheap 280V model and installing it instead. Aside from rotating at a different speed and maybe some power inefficiencies, are there any other drawbacks of using the 280V model instead? are you sure it isn't 208 ? --http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5" I'd be suspicious that the 280V was a misreading somehow of 230V. that sounds more plausible. I'm a little confused about a 230 volt circuit. In what part of the world does the utility supply 230v? jak ----- Depending on the age of the motor it could be rated 230V which now has crept up to 240V just as once we had 110V, then 115V then 120V as nominal voltages -(except for the radio people who settled on 117V and assumed that that was what you got.). Here in New Zealand, the mains voltage is 230 volts, likewise Australia. |
#12
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Posted to alt.energy.homepower,alt.engineering.electrical,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics.electromag
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![]() "jakdedert" wrote in message . .. Jamie wrote: hr(bob) wrote: On Apr 26, 6:14 pm, Jamie t wrote: Deodiaus wrote: I have a broken pool motor [magnetek y56y] which will cost a bundle to fix or repair. While doing a search on the web, I found the same model (really cheap) but wired for 280V, instead of the 230 V load that my wiring is supplies. Now, I was thinking of buying the cheap 280V model and installing it instead. Aside from rotating at a different speed and maybe some power inefficiencies, are there any other drawbacks of using the 280V model instead? are you sure it isn't 208 ? --http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5" I'd be suspicious that the 280V was a misreading somehow of 230V. that sounds more plausible. I'm a little confused about a 230 volt circuit. In what part of the world does the utility supply 230v? jak Most except the USA and Canada and a few others. John G. |
#13
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In alt.engineering.electrical jakdedert wrote:
| I'm a little confused about a 230 volt circuit. In what part of the | world does the utility supply 230v? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mains_power_systems There are two different flavors of 220/230/240 volts. Some places have a simple system with one wire hot and one wire grounded. Other places have a split system where the voltage is split in half to get 110/115/120 volts relative to ground, by adding a additional "middle" conductor that is the grounded one. -- |WARNING: Due to extreme spam, I no longer see any articles originating from | | Google Groups. If you want your postings to be seen by more readers | | you will need to find a different place to post on Usenet. | | Phil Howard KA9WGN (email for humans: first name in lower case at ipal.net) | |
#14
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Posted to alt.energy.homepower,alt.engineering.electrical,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics.electromag
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![]() "DaveM" wrote in message . .. "Deodiaus" wrote in message ... I have a broken pool motor [magnetek y56y] which will cost a bundle to fix or repair. While doing a search on the web, I found the same model (really cheap) but wired for 280V, instead of the 230 V load that my wiring is supplies. Now, I was thinking of buying the cheap 280V model and installing it instead. Aside from rotating at a different speed and maybe some power inefficiencies, are there any other drawbacks of using the 280V model instead? If it's the same model motor, you might be able to rewire it for your 230V supply. Look at the nameplate or inside the wiring chamber to see if there is a wiring diagram that details wiring connections for different voltages. Barring that, you might search the Mfr's website (if they are still in business) or Google for the make and model of your motor and see if there is any data on it that details the wiring instructions. -- Dave M MasonDG44 at comcast dot net (Just substitute the appropriate characters in the address) What's broken on the original motor? There isn't a whole lot to go wrong with these, I've yet to run into one I couldn't fix. |
#15
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Posted to alt.energy.homepower,alt.engineering.electrical,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics.electromag
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![]() "Jamie" t wrote in message ... hr(bob) wrote: On Apr 26, 6:14 pm, Jamie t wrote: Deodiaus wrote: I have a broken pool motor [magnetek y56y] which will cost a bundle to fix or repair. While doing a search on the web, I found the same model (really cheap) but wired for 280V, instead of the 230 V load that my wiring is supplies. Now, I was thinking of buying the cheap 280V model and installing it instead. Aside from rotating at a different speed and maybe some power inefficiencies, are there any other drawbacks of using the 280V model instead? are you sure it isn't 208 ? --http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5" I'd be suspicious that the 280V was a misreading somehow of 230V. that sounds more plausible. Misreading of 208V undoubtably, 208 is very common in commercial buildings, that and 277. |
#16
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Posted to alt.energy.homepower,alt.engineering.electrical,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics.electromag
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![]() "jakdedert" wrote in message . .. Jamie wrote: hr(bob) wrote: On Apr 26, 6:14 pm, Jamie t wrote: Deodiaus wrote: I have a broken pool motor [magnetek y56y] which will cost a bundle to fix or repair. While doing a search on the web, I found the same model (really cheap) but wired for 280V, instead of the 230 V load that my wiring is supplies. Now, I was thinking of buying the cheap 280V model and installing it instead. Aside from rotating at a different speed and maybe some power inefficiencies, are there any other drawbacks of using the 280V model instead? are you sure it isn't 208 ? --http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5" I'd be suspicious that the 280V was a misreading somehow of 230V. that sounds more plausible. I'm a little confused about a 230 volt circuit. In what part of the world does the utility supply 230v? jak In theory, it's 230 on a single phase - neutral circuit here in the UK now, but in practice, it's actually nearer the previously accepted 240v for the most part ... Arfa |
#17
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Posted to alt.energy.homepower,alt.engineering.electrical,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics.electromag
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jakdedert wrote:
Jamie wrote: hr(bob) wrote: On Apr 26, 6:14 pm, Jamie t wrote: Deodiaus wrote: I have a broken pool motor [magnetek y56y] which will cost a bundle to fix or repair. While doing a search on the web, I found the same model (really cheap) but wired for 280V, instead of the 230 V load that my wiring is supplies. Now, I was thinking of buying the cheap 280V model and installing it instead. Aside from rotating at a different speed and maybe some power inefficiencies, are there any other drawbacks of using the 280V model instead? are you sure it isn't 208 ? --http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5" I'd be suspicious that the 280V was a misreading somehow of 230V. that sounds more plausible. I'm a little confused about a 230 volt circuit. In what part of the world does the utility supply 230v? jak UK ! 230/240 V -- Best Regards: Baron. |
#18
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Posted to alt.energy.homepower,alt.engineering.electrical,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics.electromag
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![]() "James Sweet" wrote in message news:yFWQj.134$_v1.102@trndny06... "DaveM" wrote in message . .. "Deodiaus" wrote in message ... I have a broken pool motor [magnetek y56y] which will cost a bundle to fix or repair. While doing a search on the web, I found the same model (really cheap) but wired for 280V, instead of the 230 V load that my wiring is supplies. Now, I was thinking of buying the cheap 280V model and installing it instead. Aside from rotating at a different speed and maybe some power inefficiencies, are there any other drawbacks of using the 280V model instead? If it's the same model motor, you might be able to rewire it for your 230V supply. Look at the nameplate or inside the wiring chamber to see if there is a wiring diagram that details wiring connections for different voltages. Barring that, you might search the Mfr's website (if they are still in business) or Google for the make and model of your motor and see if there is any data on it that details the wiring instructions. -- Dave M MasonDG44 at comcast dot net (Just substitute the appropriate characters in the address) What's broken on the original motor? There isn't a whole lot to go wrong with these, I've yet to run into one I couldn't fix. Me too. Usually it's just been corrosion that can be cleaned off and/or lack or lubrication. |
#19
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#20
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![]() "You" wrote in message ... In article , wrote: There are two different flavors of 220/230/240 volts. Some places have a simple system with one wire hot and one wire grounded. Other places have a split system where the voltage is split in half to get 110/115/120 volts relative to ground, by adding a additional "middle" conductor that is the grounded one. Sonny, you need to LEARN the difference between Ground and Neutral...... before you spout any further BS....... What he wrote looks reasonable to me in terms of ground and neutral. Neutral is the grounded conductor where I live. He does not say to use a ground as a neutral, if that's what you're getting at. I can only guess that that may be what you're getting at, you haven't really said. [trimmed sci.physics.electromag] j |
#21
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#22
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#23
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#24
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In article ,
wrote: Is the grounded conductor in a 2-wire 230/240 volt system fed to each home referred to as "neutral" even in UK? Yes. - but where is it grounded. Formerly it was grounded only at the star (centre) point of the local transformer, but more recently is it being grounded (again) at the domestic intake point. -- From KT24 - in "Leafy Surrey" Using a RISC OS computer running v5.11 |
#25
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In article ,
writes: In alt.engineering.electrical Arfa Daily wrote: | | "jakdedert" wrote in message | . .. | I'm a little confused about a 230 volt circuit. In what part of the world | does the utility supply 230v? | | jak | | In theory, it's 230 on a single phase - neutral circuit here in the UK now, | but in practice, it's actually nearer the previously accepted 240v for the | most part ... Is the grounded conductor in a 2-wire 230/240 volt system fed to each home referred to as "neutral" even in UK? Yes, although we have 3 types of supply arrangement for earthing used on public supplies. (Note that on 240V, there's often far more distance between the consumer and the transformer than you'll find in the US on 120V supplies.) TN-S: Neutral is grounded only at the transformer, but a separate earth conductor is carried in the supply network and brought into the home from that same grounding point. TN-C-S (also known as Protective Multiple Earthing): A single PEN (Protective Earth and Neutral) conductor from the transformer serves as both neutral and ground connection in the supply network. The PEN conductor must also be earthed regularly throughout the supply network, and it requires very high integrity connections to ensure the risk of it breaking is very low (this is a legal requirement). Once the supply reaches the consumer, the PEN conductor is split into separate neutral and earth conductors in the installation. TT: The supplier grounds the neutral as for TN-S, but doesn't provide the consumer with any earthing connection. The consumer needs to make their own ground connection for earthing (and shouldn't cross-connect this to the neutral). TT is only found on old rural overhead supply networks, and they are upgraded to TN-C-S when due for refurbishment. Even if the supplier does provide an earth connection (TN-S or TN-C-S), the installation can choose to ignore it and be wired as a TT system. This is sometimes done for submains to outbuildings and outdoor electrics, even when the main installation is TN-S or TN-C-S. These earthing system arrangements are covered in the uk.d-i-y FAQ: http://www.diyfaq.org.uk/electrical/...al.html#system -- Andrew Gabriel [email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup] |
#26
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![]() wrote in message ... In alt.engineering.electrical Arfa Daily wrote: | | "jakdedert" wrote in message | . .. | Jamie wrote: | hr(bob) wrote: | | On Apr 26, 6:14 pm, Jamie | t wrote: | | Deodiaus wrote: | | I have a broken pool motor [magnetek y56y] which will cost a bundle to | fix | or repair. | While doing a search on the web, I found the same model (really cheap) | but | wired for 280V, instead of the 230 V load that my wiring is supplies. | Now, I was thinking of buying the cheap 280V model and installing it | instead. Aside from rotating at a different speed and | maybe some power inefficiencies, are there any other drawbacks of | using the 280V model | instead? | | are you sure it isn't 208 ? | | --http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5" | | | I'd be suspicious that the 280V was a misreading somehow of 230V. | that sounds more plausible. | | I'm a little confused about a 230 volt circuit. In what part of the world | does the utility supply 230v? | | jak | | In theory, it's 230 on a single phase - neutral circuit here in the UK now, | but in practice, it's actually nearer the previously accepted 240v for the | most part ... Is the grounded conductor in a 2-wire 230/240 volt system fed to each home referred to as "neutral" even in UK? One common neutral that is grounded back at the nearest transformer substation, and three phases, fed singly to homes in a reasonably 'balanced' way (loading-wise). So one side of the street may be fed from one phase, and the other side of the street from a different phase, then further up the street, some more houses connected to the remaining phase and so on. Each house also has a protective ground connection. Generally, no 'pole pigs' except in rural areas. For the most part, each collection of several hundred houses, are connected underground to a small building containing 3 phase transformers. I think that the input to these stations is around 11kV, also underground. The 'hot' side of the supply is usually known as "live" in the UK, but is sometimes also known as "phase". I'm not an electrical engineer, but that's pretty much the basis of the UK domestic distribution system. Commercial premises usually have a full three phase plus neutral connection to the network. Arfa |
#27
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![]() wrote in message ... In alt.engineering.electrical operator jay wrote: | | "You" wrote in message | ... | In article , | | wrote: | | There are two different flavors of 220/230/240 volts. Some places | have a | simple system with one wire hot and one wire grounded. Other | places have | a split system where the voltage is split in half to get | 110/115/120 volts | relative to ground, by adding a additional "middle" conductor that | is the | grounded one. | | Sonny, you need to LEARN the difference between Ground and | Neutral...... | before you spout any further BS....... | | What he wrote looks reasonable to me in terms of ground and neutral. | Neutral is the grounded conductor where I live. He does not say to | use a ground as a neutral, if that's what you're getting at. I can | only guess that that may be what you're getting at, you haven't really | said. He might be one of those "knows just enough to be really dangerous" people on the net. I didn't even mention "neutral". My intent was to explain it in a simpler way for someone to just understand the basic difference. The term "middle" was to convey a little more information than "neutral" would SNIP Well, I understood what he meant, but maybe I took it the wrong way. When he said middle conudctor I was thinking the center lug on the transformer which is grounded and used as the neutral. Mike |
#28
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![]() "Andrew Gabriel" wrote in message ... In article , writes: In alt.engineering.electrical Arfa Daily wrote: | | "jakdedert" wrote in message | . .. | I'm a little confused about a 230 volt circuit. In what part of the world | does the utility supply 230v? | | jak | | In theory, it's 230 on a single phase - neutral circuit here in the UK now, | but in practice, it's actually nearer the previously accepted 240v for the | most part ... Is the grounded conductor in a 2-wire 230/240 volt system fed to each home referred to as "neutral" even in UK? Yes, although we have 3 types of supply arrangement for earthing used on public supplies. (Note that on 240V, there's often far more distance between the consumer and the transformer than you'll find in the US on 120V supplies.) TN-S: Neutral is grounded only at the transformer, but a separate earth conductor is carried in the supply network and brought into the home from that same grounding point. In the USA they ground the Neutral at the transformer and do not run a seperate ground conductor to the house. There is however a ground rod driven which is tied to the neutral at the entrance to the house. ] |
#29
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I tried first by replacing the capacitor. I could not pry off the
pump because it was rusted shut and bolted on well. The repair guy said it was a break in the winding. He is rewinding it for $170. I was thinking of doing it myself but I was told that rewinding it manually is tough. BTW, I cannot refind the "for sale" motor on the web anymore. What's broken on the original motor? There isn't a whole lot to go wrong with these, I've yet to run into one I couldn't fix. |
#30
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#31
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In alt.engineering.electrical Andrew Gabriel wrote:
| Yes, although we have 3 types of supply arrangement for earthing | used on public supplies. (Note that on 240V, there's often far | more distance between the consumer and the transformer than | you'll find in the US on 120V supplies.) Our supplies to homes are also 240V. We just ground it in a different way through the use of a center tap and an additional wire, which gets the neutral designation. For an equivalent _balanced_ load in the US, we should see no more voltage drop than in the UK. And that voltage drop will be effectively halved between one of the hots and the neutral. | TN-S: | Neutral is grounded only at the transformer, but a separate | earth conductor is carried in the supply network and brought | into the home from that same grounding point. | | TN-C-S (also known as Protective Multiple Earthing): | A single PEN (Protective Earth and Neutral) conductor from | the transformer serves as both neutral and ground connection | in the supply network. The PEN conductor must also be earthed | regularly throughout the supply network, and it requires very | high integrity connections to ensure the risk of it breaking | is very low (this is a legal requirement). Once the supply | reaches the consumer, the PEN conductor is split into separate | neutral and earth conductors in the installation. | | TT: | The supplier grounds the neutral as for TN-S, but doesn't | provide the consumer with any earthing connection. The | consumer needs to make their own ground connection for earthing | (and shouldn't cross-connect this to the neutral). | TT is only found on old rural overhead supply networks, and | they are upgraded to TN-C-S when due for refurbishment. | | Even if the supplier does provide an earth connection (TN-S | or TN-C-S), the installation can choose to ignore it and be | wired as a TT system. This is sometimes done for submains | to outbuildings and outdoor electrics, even when the main | installation is TN-S or TN-C-S. | | These earthing system arrangements are covered in the uk.d-i-y | FAQ: http://www.diyfaq.org.uk/electrical/...al.html#system Nice info! I'm curious about this: is it legal in the UK for a home to feed their supply into their own transformer and ground the secondary at that point as a new system? -- |WARNING: Due to extreme spam, I no longer see any articles originating from | | Google Groups. If you want your postings to be seen by more readers | | you will need to find a different place to post on Usenet. | | Phil Howard KA9WGN (email for humans: first name in lower case at ipal.net) | |
#32
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If you are in North America, and have 120 VAC to the outlets, what you
call 220 or 230 VAC in your home is actually 208 VAC, unless you installed some kind of transformer to compensate. I somehow think that the vendor of the motor made an error. Having 280 VAC sounds to me very unconventional, unless this was some kind of special installation. I would buy the motor. If in the even that it needed a higher voltage because it lacks torque for your application, then there is the possibility of needed an transformer. This would be expensive. Some motors have a cover plate inside with strappings, to allow changing its operating voltage, RPM, and direction of rotation. If you were to run a synchronous motor on a lower voltage, it will have lower torque rather than lower RPM, unless the supply voltage was reduced to below the motor's stable operating threshold. Synchronous motors are dependent on the AC frequency (Hz) for their RPM. -- JANA _____ "Deodiaus" wrote in message ... I have a broken pool motor [magnetek y56y] which will cost a bundle to fix or repair. While doing a search on the web, I found the same model (really cheap) but wired for 280V, instead of the 230 V load that my wiring is supplies. Now, I was thinking of buying the cheap 280V model and installing it instead. Aside from rotating at a different speed and maybe some power inefficiencies, are there any other drawbacks of using the 280V model instead? |
#33
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Posted to alt.energy.homepower,alt.engineering.electrical,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics.electromag
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![]() "JANA" wrote in message news:meWdnTMrMd-EXovVnZ2dnUVZ_tGonZ2d@uniservecommunications... If you are in North America, and have 120 VAC to the outlets, what you call 220 or 230 VAC in your home is actually 208 VAC, unless you installed some kind of transformer to compensate. No, that's not true. It's 240V, the transformer has a grounded center tap so 120 from either side to neutral, and 240 between the hots. You find 208V in commercial buildings and some apartment complexes that are fed with 3 phase, but not in a house, unless you're one of the few lucky people to have 3 phase available. I somehow think that the vendor of the motor made an error. Having 280 VAC sounds to me very unconventional, unless this was some kind of special installation. It's clearly a typo and should be 208V. |
#34
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Posted to alt.energy.homepower,alt.engineering.electrical,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics.electromag
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![]() "James Sweet" wrote in message news:NwzRj.2777$uS1.2692@trndny05... "JANA" wrote in message news:meWdnTMrMd-EXovVnZ2dnUVZ_tGonZ2d@uniservecommunications... If you are in North America, and have 120 VAC to the outlets, what you call 220 or 230 VAC in your home is actually 208 VAC, unless you installed some kind of transformer to compensate. No, that's not true. It's 240V, the transformer has a grounded center tap so 120 from either side to neutral, and 240 between the hots. You find 208V in commercial buildings and some apartment complexes that are fed with 3 phase, but not in a house, unless you're one of the few lucky people to have 3 phase available. I somehow think that the vendor of the motor made an error. Having 280 VAC sounds to me very unconventional, unless this was some kind of special installation. It's clearly a typo and should be 208V. If it's not a silly question, with the motor in question being offered "on the web, really cheap", then if it's e-bay, why not use the 'ask the seller a question' option, or if it's a reseller, use his on-site 'contact us' facility ? Then there would be no debate about typos and exotic voltage issues ... :-) Arfa |
#35
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On Apr 28, 4:07 pm, Deodiaus wrote:
I tried first by replacing the capacitor. I could not pry off the pump because it was rusted shut and bolted on well. This is standard with "pool stuff" around water. The repair guy said it was a break in the winding. He is rewinding it for $170. I was thinking of doing it myself but I was told that rewinding it manually is tough. He is right, it is. BTW, I cannot refind the "for sale" motor on the web anymore. Here's the first lesson in "shopping like a woman": Ya snooze, Ya loose! You see that "good price" you MUST buy it right then and there. If you futz around trying to make up your mind, it'll always be too late! Later it will be gone. [Hey, you think there's nobody else out there who can spot a bargain like you?] |
#36
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Posted to alt.energy.homepower,alt.engineering.electrical,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics.electromag
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![]() "Arfa Daily" wrote in message news:TQARj.75480 If it's not a silly question, with the motor in question being offered "on the web, really cheap", then if it's e-bay, why not use the 'ask the seller a question' option, or if it's a reseller, use his on-site 'contact us' facility ? Then there would be no debate about typos and exotic voltage issues ... :-) Because it's long gone. |
#37
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On Tue, 29 Apr 2008 02:29:35 -0400, "JANA" wrote:
If you are in North America, and have 120 VAC to the outlets, what you call 220 or 230 VAC in your home is actually 208 VAC, unless you installed some kind of transformer to compensate. Nope. The NA standard residential voltage is 120/240 single phase. 120/208 only happens when the single phase power is derived from a 3 phase wye-connected transformer bank. The only place I've heard of that happening on a regular basis is in high-rise apartments. For smaller buildings, the split delta configuration is more common. This supplies 120/240 single phase and 240 three phase from one 3-transformer bank. This is also sometimes known as the "wild leg" configuration because the leg not associated with the single phase supply has a odd voltage to neutral/ground. Something like 214 volts if my memory holds. John -- John De Armond See my website for my current email address http://www.neon-john.com http://www.johndearmond.com -- best little blog on the net! Tellico Plains, Occupied TN I like you ... you remind me of me when I was young and stupid. |
#38
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Posted to alt.energy.homepower,alt.engineering.electrical,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics.electromag
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In alt.engineering.electrical JANA wrote:
| If you are in North America, and have 120 VAC to the outlets, what you | call 220 or 230 VAC in your home is actually 208 VAC, unless you | installed some kind of transformer to compensate. That's only true if the source transformer is a three phase WYE/star type. If you have center tapped delta three phase, or single phase Edison split, then you have genuine 240 volts (although with that delta you may also have a third wire that is 208 volts relative to ground/neutral). | I somehow think that the vendor of the motor made an error. Having 280 | VAC sounds to me very unconventional, unless this was some kind of | special installation. It may be a reference to working on 277 volts, which is an available voltage in some large commercial/industrial locations. -- |WARNING: Due to extreme spam, I no longer see any articles originating from | | Google Groups. If you want your postings to be seen by more readers | | you will need to find a different place to post on Usenet. | | Phil Howard KA9WGN (email for humans: first name in lower case at ipal.net) | |
#39
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On Apr 26, 7:23*pm, "hr(bob) "
wrote: On Apr 26, 6:14*pm, Jamie t wrote: Deodiaus wrote: I have a broken pool motor [magnetek y56y] which will cost a bundle to fix or repair. While doing a search on the web, I found the same model (really cheap) but wired for 280V, instead of the 230 V load that my wiring is supplies. Now, I was thinking of buying the cheap 280V model and installing it instead. *Aside from rotating at a different speed and maybe some power inefficiencies, are there any other drawbacks of using the 280V model instead? * are you sure it isn't 208 ? --http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5" I'd be suspicious that the 280V was a misreading somehow of 230V.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - yeah, where do you find 280 volts? it's either 208 or 230. |
#40
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Posted to alt.energy.homepower,alt.engineering.electrical,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics.electromag
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![]() ? "Deodiaus" ?????? ??? ?????? ... I have a broken pool motor [magnetek y56y] which will cost a bundle to fix or repair. While doing a search on the web, I found the same model (really cheap) but wired for 280V, instead of the 230 V load that my wiring is supplies. Now, I was thinking of buying the cheap 280V model and installing it instead. Aside from rotating at a different speed and maybe some power inefficiencies, are there any other drawbacks of using the 280V model instead? Yes-it could be toast in a couple of seconds. While motors with brushes, like the ones used in short duty appliances, like drills and blenters, will rotate slower in lower voltages, without problems, Asynchronous motors (brushless) will really smoke to death if used in voltages significantly lower than nominal. Can't you find a generic pool motor, if you know the horsepower, voltage (3 phase? line to line) and intake and outlet gauge? and maybe rpm? HTH, -- Tzortzakakis Dimitrios major in electrical engineering mechanized infantry reservist hordad AT otenet DOT gr |
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