Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work.

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Ray Field
 
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Default OT - Commutator Sparking

This is more electrical than machine shop but somewhere in the collected
wisdom of the group will be an answer.
Normally an electric brush type motor will have "no"sparking at the
armature, what does sparking indicate and what is the cure.
This occurred on a built-in vacuum cleaner motor. Relay/switch module
failed, bypassing the module allowed the motor to run normally. Pulled the
brushes, lots of brush left and free movement - reinstalled brushes in same
position lots of sparks.
All advice appreciated.


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Nick Müller
 
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Ray Field wrote:

Pulled the brushes, lots of brush left and free movement - reinstalled
brushes in same position lots of sparks.


It just takes some time to break them in when moved. Some sparkling will
still remain, depending on timing of the collector.


Nick

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Ray Field wrote:
This is more electrical than machine shop but somewhere in the collected
wisdom of the group will be an answer.
Normally an electric brush type motor will have "no"sparking at the
armature, what does sparking indicate and what is the cure.
This occurred on a built-in vacuum cleaner motor. Relay/switch module
failed, bypassing the module allowed the motor to run normally. Pulled the
brushes, lots of brush left and free movement - reinstalled brushes in same
position lots of sparks.
All advice appreciated.


I've done a fair amount of commutator turning and small motor repair.
If the motor has had a lot of use, the commutator can be grooved and
pitted or adjacent bars can even be shorted by accumulated brush dust
and gunk. If you didn't get the brushes back into the same holes they
came out of, you'll get a lot of sparking until they wear in again. I
had one commutator that was like .030" eccentric, that one chewed up
brushes like crazy until I turned it. On some DC/universal motors, you
can move the brush holders until they're in the best position where
sparking is least, not many small motors have that feature but it's
handy. You'll always get a small amount of sparking, but it's not like
the ring of sparks you'll get from bad brush position, poor brush fit
or a shorted commutator bar. With the proper tooling, it only takes
like 10 minutes to turn a small motor commutator and maybe that much
again to undercut the commutator grooves with a hand tool. I usually
use a ground-down hacksaw blade for that. On some vacuum cleaners,
getting the armature out is the toughest part of the job, they really
want you to toss the whole works and buy a new one.

Stan

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jim rozen
 
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In article kh2le.18395$wr.1289@clgrps12, Ray Field says...

This is more electrical than machine shop but somewhere in the collected
wisdom of the group will be an answer.
Normally an electric brush type motor will have "no"sparking at the
armature, what does sparking indicate and what is the cure.
This occurred on a built-in vacuum cleaner motor. Relay/switch module
failed, bypassing the module allowed the motor to run normally. Pulled the
brushes, lots of brush left and free movement - reinstalled brushes in same
position lots of sparks.
All advice appreciated.


Did you put the brushes back in *exactly* the same way they came out?

Ie, left brush in left holder, right brush in right holder, and each
one not flipped 180 degrees around its long axis?

They do tend to wear in with an assymetric radius at the working end.
If one went in flipped, it might spark until it wears in again.

Jim


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Jeff Wisnia
 
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Ray Field wrote:
This is more electrical than machine shop but somewhere in the collected
wisdom of the group will be an answer.
Normally an electric brush type motor will have "no"sparking at the
armature, what does sparking indicate and what is the cure.
This occurred on a built-in vacuum cleaner motor. Relay/switch module
failed, bypassing the module allowed the motor to run normally. Pulled the
brushes, lots of brush left and free movement - reinstalled brushes in same
position lots of sparks.
All advice appreciated.



If you can find a "Commutator brush seating stone", try using it against
the spinning commutator while the motor is running. (Please don't
electrocute yourself.)

I had one of them back when I encountered more "universal" brush type
motors. It was a soft white abrasive stone about 4" long and maybe 3/8"
x 3/16" cross section. I could usually find a path to shove it through
so the end could reach the commutator, though YMMV.

You can probably still get them through automotive electrical supply places.

HTH,

Jeff

--
Jeffry Wisnia

(W1BSV + Brass Rat '57 EE)

"Truth exists; only falsehood has to be invented."


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Jeff Wisnia wrote:
Ray Field wrote:
This is more electrical than machine shop but somewhere in the collected
wisdom of the group will be an answer.
Normally an electric brush type motor will have "no"sparking at the
armature, what does sparking indicate and what is the cure.
This occurred on a built-in vacuum cleaner motor. Relay/switch module
failed, bypassing the module allowed the motor to run normally. Pulled the
brushes, lots of brush left and free movement - reinstalled brushes in same
position lots of sparks.
All advice appreciated.



If you can find a "Commutator brush seating stone", try using it against
the spinning commutator while the motor is running. (Please don't
electrocute yourself.)

I had one of them back when I encountered more "universal" brush type
motors. It was a soft white abrasive stone about 4" long and maybe 3/8"
x 3/16" cross section. I could usually find a path to shove it through
so the end could reach the commutator, though YMMV.

You can probably still get them through automotive electrical supply places.

HTH,

Jeff

--
Jeffry Wisnia

(W1BSV + Brass Rat '57 EE)

"Truth exists; only falsehood has to be invented."





I have used common chalkboard chalk to help seat brushes

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