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Roger R July 26th 06 12:40 PM

Dishwasher motor connections
 
A friend wanted to use an ex-dishwasher pump for a d-i-y application but was
puzzled as to how to wire it up so he asked me and I'm baffled too.
Perhaps someone here can help.

The pump is of the induction motor type, having a 4 uf capacitor and three
connection wires, red and blue of normal size from the capacitor and a thin
white one entering the windings directly.
The device may be seen he
http://freespace.virgin.net/enigma.1666/index.htm

The pump is thought to be from a Candy Dishwasher, model D7610 or D820
range.

The red and blue wires on the motor side of the capacitor are shown
connected as found. Presumably the red and blue are the supply and the
white is for start and direction.

With red and blue wires were connected across the mains and the motor hums
but does not run. If the armature is spun in this condition it continues to
run in whatever direction it is turned.

If the white wire is connected to the supply the motor again hums but does
not start or run and if spun -difficult- it immediatly stops.

Please advise.

Roger






The Natural Philosopher July 26th 06 01:48 PM

Dishwasher motor connections
 
Roger R wrote:
A friend wanted to use an ex-dishwasher pump for a d-i-y application but was
puzzled as to how to wire it up so he asked me and I'm baffled too.
Perhaps someone here can help.

The pump is of the induction motor type, having a 4 uf capacitor and three
connection wires, red and blue of normal size from the capacitor and a thin
white one entering the windings directly.
The device may be seen he
http://freespace.virgin.net/enigma.1666/index.htm

The pump is thought to be from a Candy Dishwasher, model D7610 or D820
range.

The red and blue wires on the motor side of the capacitor are shown
connected as found. Presumably the red and blue are the supply and the
white is for start and direction.

With red and blue wires were connected across the mains and the motor hums
but does not run. If the armature is spun in this condition it continues to
run in whatever direction it is turned.

If the white wire is connected to the supply the motor again hums but does
not start or run and if spun -difficult- it immediatly stops.

Please advise.

Roger





What SHOULD happen is that the red and blue wire in the motor go
directly to the mains, and the mains should go to the white wire VIA the
capacitor.

I can't figure out how that can be achieved with what you have there.

Hmm the one sitting in front of me here, also looks odd.looks like it
also has red and blue to go to the capacitor....possibly the power
should go into the white and blue, with the motor connected as you show it.

This is how I thought it was supposed to work

http://www.homemetalshopclub.org/news/sep01/sep01.html

Roger R July 26th 06 02:19 PM

Dishwasher motor connections
 

"The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message
...
What SHOULD happen is that the red and blue wire in the motor go directly
to the mains, and the mains should go to the white wire VIA the capacitor.

I can't figure out how that can be achieved with what you have there.

Hmm the one sitting in front of me here, also looks odd.looks like it also
has red and blue to go to the capacitor....possibly the power should go
into the white and blue, with the motor connected as you show it.

This is how I thought it was supposed to work

http://www.homemetalshopclub.org/news/sep01/sep01.html


The link shows my intial thoughts, but it doesn't appear possible to be like
that at all.

Thing is... if the white is for the start winding, then surely it should be
at least as thick or possibly thicker as the others as the starting current
will be higher than the run current. But in this case the white wire is a
much thinner wire. Presumably the white links to some control board, could
there be another small capacitor there to give the phase advance for the
start.

I forgot to mention the ohmeter and voltmeter readings, perhaps because I
appear to have mislaid the sheet. Never the less as I recall:
240V applied to red and blue, white is approx at 110V.

Red to blue around 180 ohms, white to red or blue around half that.
I recollect there was small bias to one side, for example white to red
95 ohms and white to blue 85 ohms.

Roger



The Natural Philosopher July 26th 06 03:05 PM

Dishwasher motor connections
 
Roger R wrote:
"The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message
...
What SHOULD happen is that the red and blue wire in the motor go directly
to the mains, and the mains should go to the white wire VIA the capacitor.

I can't figure out how that can be achieved with what you have there.

Hmm the one sitting in front of me here, also looks odd.looks like it also
has red and blue to go to the capacitor....possibly the power should go
into the white and blue, with the motor connected as you show it.

This is how I thought it was supposed to work

http://www.homemetalshopclub.org/news/sep01/sep01.html


The link shows my intial thoughts, but it doesn't appear possible to be like
that at all.

Thing is... if the white is for the start winding, then surely it should be
at least as thick or possibly thicker as the others as the starting current
will be higher than the run current. But in this case the white wire is a
much thinner wire. Presumably the white links to some control board, could
there be another small capacitor there to give the phase advance for the
start.


No. The start winding merely kicks the motor in the right direction on
starting. Its usually a very fine winding in addition to, one of the others.


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