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Karl Townsend February 23rd 11 08:58 PM

electrocube
 
I just finished the complete tear down of my spare Excello machine.
The large castings go outside in the boneyard. All the small parts fit
on two pallets and will go into warehouse storage.

Anyway, I came across a maybe useful part I haven't seen before. its
called an electrocube RG1801 and its mounted on the load side of three
phase contactors. Imagine an equilateral triangle or delta. The points
of the triangle are the three phases. Each leg of the triangle has a
..47 MFD cap and a 220 ohm resistor. Must be some sort of filter.
Whet's the purpose here and should it be used on other three phase
devices?

Karl

[email protected] February 23rd 11 09:09 PM

electrocube
 
On Feb 23, 1:58*pm, Karl Townsend
wrote:
I just finished the complete tear down of my spare Excello machine.
The large castings go outside in the boneyard. All the small parts fit
on two pallets and will go into warehouse storage.

Anyway, I came across a maybe useful part I haven't seen before. its
called an electrocube RG1801 and its mounted on the load side of three
phase contactors. Imagine an equilateral triangle or delta. The points
of the triangle are the three phases. Each leg of the triangle has a
.47 MFD cap and a 220 ohm resistor. Must be some sort of filter.
Whet's the purpose here and should it be used on other three phase
devices?

Karl


Somebody else probably has a better idea, the only thing I can thing
of, given its location, is a snubber to kill at least some of the
spikes when the contacter kicks in and out. I assume the resistor and
capacitor are in series on each leg. Would be nice to have a voltage
spec on the cap and a power rating on the resistor, though.

Stan

Pete C. February 23rd 11 09:22 PM

electrocube
 

Karl Townsend wrote:

I just finished the complete tear down of my spare Excello machine.
The large castings go outside in the boneyard. All the small parts fit
on two pallets and will go into warehouse storage.

Anyway, I came across a maybe useful part I haven't seen before. its
called an electrocube RG1801 and its mounted on the load side of three
phase contactors. Imagine an equilateral triangle or delta. The points
of the triangle are the three phases. Each leg of the triangle has a
.47 MFD cap and a 220 ohm resistor. Must be some sort of filter.
Whet's the purpose here and should it be used on other three phase
devices?

Karl


It's called a "snubber" and is used to control contact arcing and
burning. I've not seen a three phase brick version, but the single phase
blocks are very common in CNC machines.

John February 24th 11 12:36 AM

electrocube
 
wrote:
On Feb 23, 1:58 pm, Karl
wrote:
I just finished the complete tear down of my spare Excello machine.
The large castings go outside in the boneyard. All the small parts fit
on two pallets and will go into warehouse storage.

Anyway, I came across a maybe useful part I haven't seen before. its
called an electrocube RG1801 and its mounted on the load side of three
phase contactors. Imagine an equilateral triangle or delta. The points
of the triangle are the three phases. Each leg of the triangle has a
.47 MFD cap and a 220 ohm resistor. Must be some sort of filter.
Whet's the purpose here and should it be used on other three phase
devices?

Karl


Somebody else probably has a better idea, the only thing I can thing
of, given its location, is a snubber to kill at least some of the
spikes when the contacter kicks in and out. I assume the resistor and
capacitor are in series on each leg. Would be nice to have a voltage
spec on the cap and a power rating on the resistor, though.

Stan



They usually get put on the contacts of a three phase contactor to
supress transent spikes. They usually look like a black cube with a
place for bolting them to a surface and have three wires coming out of
them. Almost all the contactors in CNC machines have them.

John

John

Don Foreman February 24th 11 06:33 AM

electrocube
 
On Wed, 23 Feb 2011 15:22:58 -0600, "Pete C."
wrote:


Karl Townsend wrote:

I just finished the complete tear down of my spare Excello machine.
The large castings go outside in the boneyard. All the small parts fit
on two pallets and will go into warehouse storage.

Anyway, I came across a maybe useful part I haven't seen before. its
called an electrocube RG1801 and its mounted on the load side of three
phase contactors. Imagine an equilateral triangle or delta. The points
of the triangle are the three phases. Each leg of the triangle has a
.47 MFD cap and a 220 ohm resistor. Must be some sort of filter.
Whet's the purpose here and should it be used on other three phase
devices?

Karl


It's called a "snubber" and is used to control contact arcing and
burning. I've not seen a three phase brick version, but the single phase
blocks are very common in CNC machines.


Electrocube is a manufacturer of film capacitors. They've been around
a long time.
http://www.electrocube.com/

Pete C. February 24th 11 02:26 PM

electrocube
 

Don Foreman wrote:

On Wed, 23 Feb 2011 15:22:58 -0600, "Pete C."
wrote:


Karl Townsend wrote:

I just finished the complete tear down of my spare Excello machine.
The large castings go outside in the boneyard. All the small parts fit
on two pallets and will go into warehouse storage.

Anyway, I came across a maybe useful part I haven't seen before. its
called an electrocube RG1801 and its mounted on the load side of three
phase contactors. Imagine an equilateral triangle or delta. The points
of the triangle are the three phases. Each leg of the triangle has a
.47 MFD cap and a 220 ohm resistor. Must be some sort of filter.
Whet's the purpose here and should it be used on other three phase
devices?

Karl


It's called a "snubber" and is used to control contact arcing and
burning. I've not seen a three phase brick version, but the single phase
blocks are very common in CNC machines.


Electrocube is a manufacturer of film capacitors. They've been around
a long time.
http://www.electrocube.com/


Karl already noted that the contents of the cube include a capacitor
*and* a resistor. It is a three phase version of a standard snubber
block, not a simple capacitor.


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