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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 comp.robotics.misc,sci.electronics.repair
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![]() Cross Post: sci.electronics.repair, comp.robotics.misc ***** Hello Groups, I have recently acquired two heavy duty motors for robotics use. Below is a link to the picture of one of them. http://www.mpja.com/prodinfo.asp?number=14386+MD I have both a left hand and a right hand motor. They are about a foot long, half a foot wide, and weigh in at about 40 lbs each (No wonder it cost $40 for shipping...UPS ground even.). The motor also has serviceable brushes too. There are four wires for these motors, colors red, black, white, and yellow. I'm going to assume that red and black are power, but what are the white and yellow for? A built in tachometer? The gearing is bolted on, but there doesn't appear to be any way to dismantle the motor so I can see how it is wired internally. Any thoughts or suggestions? -- Daniel Rudy Email address has been base64 encoded to reduce spam Decode email address using b64decode or uudecode -m |
#2
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Posted to comp.robotics.misc,sci.electronics.repair
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In article ,
Daniel Rudy wrote: Cross Post: sci.electronics.repair, comp.robotics.misc ***** Hello Groups, I have recently acquired two heavy duty motors for robotics use. Below is a link to the picture of one of them. http://www.mpja.com/prodinfo.asp?number=14386+MD I have both a left hand and a right hand motor. They are about a foot long, half a foot wide, and weigh in at about 40 lbs each (No wonder it cost $40 for shipping...UPS ground even.). The motor also has serviceable brushes too. There are four wires for these motors, colors red, black, white, and yellow. I'm going to assume that red and black are power, but what are the white and yellow for? A built in tachometer? The gearing is bolted on, but there doesn't appear to be any way to dismantle the motor so I can see how it is wired internally. Any thoughts or suggestions? Two of the wires for the armature, two for the field. |
#3
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Posted to comp.robotics.misc,sci.electronics.repair
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At about the time of 10/16/2008 5:51 AM, Smitty Two stated the following:
In article , Daniel Rudy wrote: Cross Post: sci.electronics.repair, comp.robotics.misc ***** Hello Groups, I have recently acquired two heavy duty motors for robotics use. Below is a link to the picture of one of them. http://www.mpja.com/prodinfo.asp?number=14386+MD I have both a left hand and a right hand motor. They are about a foot long, half a foot wide, and weigh in at about 40 lbs each (No wonder it cost $40 for shipping...UPS ground even.). The motor also has serviceable brushes too. There are four wires for these motors, colors red, black, white, and yellow. I'm going to assume that red and black are power, but what are the white and yellow for? A built in tachometer? The gearing is bolted on, but there doesn't appear to be any way to dismantle the motor so I can see how it is wired internally. Any thoughts or suggestions? Two of the wires for the armature, two for the field. A DC motor that has a field winding? I need to find a way inside these motors... -- Daniel Rudy Email address has been base64 encoded to reduce spam Decode email address using b64decode or uudecode -m |
#4
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Posted to comp.robotics.misc,sci.electronics.repair
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In article ,
Daniel Rudy wrote: Two of the wires for the armature, two for the field. A DC motor that has a field winding? I need to find a way inside these motors... Older car starter motors had field windings - called series wound. Maximum torque at stall. Will also run on AC. -- *I started out with nothing... and I still have most of it. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#5
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Posted to comp.robotics.misc,sci.electronics.repair
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At about the time of 10/16/2008 4:04 PM, Dave Plowman (News) stated the
following: In article , Daniel Rudy wrote: Two of the wires for the armature, two for the field. A DC motor that has a field winding? I need to find a way inside these motors... Older car starter motors had field windings - called series wound. Maximum torque at stall. Will also run on AC. Interesting. I have some additional information. The black and white wires are connected to brushes. The DC resistance between the two is about 2.7 ohms. The red and yellow wires have a DC resistance of 7.3 ohms. So I guess they can be wires either series or parallel. What I don't understand is if the red and yellow wires are for the field, then why bring them out? Why not just connect them internally? -- Daniel Rudy Email address has been base64 encoded to reduce spam Decode email address using b64decode or uudecode -m |
#6
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Posted to comp.robotics.misc,sci.electronics.repair
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In article ,
Daniel Rudy wrote: I have some additional information. The black and white wires are connected to brushes. The DC resistance between the two is about 2.7 ohms. The red and yellow wires have a DC resistance of 7.3 ohms. So I guess they can be wires either series or parallel. What I don't understand is if the red and yellow wires are for the field, then why bring them out? Why not just connect them internally? Think the way they are connected - series or parallel - makes a difference to the motor characteristics. Also separate access to the field can make speed control easier. -- *Everybody lies, but it doesn't matter since nobody listens* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
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