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-   -   electric motor - "type P"? (https://www.diybanter.com/metalworking/162030-electric-motor-type-p.html)

Grant Erwin May 19th 06 02:58 AM

electric motor - "type P"?
 
I picked up a used 1.5 hp 3 phase motor today, because it was local, cheap, and
appears clean with no detectable bearing crunch. It is a slightly unusual motor,
doesn't appear to be TEFC, ODP, or even sealed. The name plate calls out "Type
P" which may be unique to Reliance motors. Anyone know what "Type P" means?

GWE

Grant Erwin May 19th 06 03:11 AM

electric motor - "type P"?
 
I take it back. It may be a completely sealed motor, I see no vents anywhere.
Wish this were a 66 frame, I'd pop it onto my 9" South Bend in a heartbeat. I
could bore the pulley from 3/4" to 7/8" and stroke a new keyway, might wind up
doing that anyway. This motor runs real nice and quiet. I might also use it to
make a super-quiet little phase converter just to run my 1 hp and below 3 phase
machines.

GWE

Grant Erwin wrote:

I picked up a used 1.5 hp 3 phase motor today, because it was local,
cheap, and appears clean with no detectable bearing crunch. It is a
slightly unusual motor, doesn't appear to be TEFC, ODP, or even sealed.
The name plate calls out "Type P" which may be unique to Reliance
motors. Anyone know what "Type P" means?


Robert Swinney May 19th 06 01:50 PM

electric motor - "type P"?
 
NEMA classifications according to a motor's electrical characteristics are
listed Class A through Class F. "P" must be a manuf. designation as you
say.

Bob Swinney
"Grant Erwin" wrote in message
...
I take it back. It may be a completely sealed motor, I see no vents
anywhere. Wish this were a 66 frame, I'd pop it onto my 9" South Bend in a
heartbeat. I could bore the pulley from 3/4" to 7/8" and stroke a new
keyway, might wind up doing that anyway. This motor runs real nice and
quiet. I might also use it to make a super-quiet little phase converter
just to run my 1 hp and below 3 phase machines.

GWE

Grant Erwin wrote:

I picked up a used 1.5 hp 3 phase motor today, because it was local,
cheap, and appears clean with no detectable bearing crunch. It is a
slightly unusual motor, doesn't appear to be TEFC, ODP, or even sealed.
The name plate calls out "Type P" which may be unique to Reliance motors.
Anyone know what "Type P" means?




Loren Amelang May 21st 06 01:55 AM

electric motor - "type P"?
 
On Fri, 19 May 2006 07:50:07 -0500, "Robert Swinney"
wrote:

NEMA classifications according to a motor's electrical characteristics are
listed Class A through Class F. "P" must be a manuf. designation as you
say.


Grant Erwin wrote:

I picked up a used 1.5 hp 3 phase motor today, because it was local,
cheap, and appears clean with no detectable bearing crunch. It is a
slightly unusual motor, doesn't appear to be TEFC, ODP, or even sealed.
The name plate calls out "Type P" which may be unique to Reliance motors.
Anyone know what "Type P" means?


Look at http://www.gillettegenerators.com/sizing/sizing03.html

NEMA codes go all the way to 'V'. The later letters just aren't seen
very often in consumer use, because they hit the line too hard when
they start. In practise it seems much worse than the numbers would
indicate. My 5KW Onan generator has no problem with a 1 Hp 'K' motor,
but switching on a 1 Hp 'M' motor will kill it to a dead stop
instantly.

Loren


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