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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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The electric motor in my circular saw has started to arc round the
brushes - lighting up the underneath of the saw table. I took out the brushes but couldn't see anything wrong. There was about 10mm of carbon and when reinserted the spring was compressed so the brush was pressing against the commutator. Is there anything else that could be wrong and is straightforward to check out and deal with? The saw is a Bosch GKS 85S -- Frank Stacey |
#2
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On Jul 6, 5:13*pm, Frank Stacey
wrote: The electric motor in my circular saw has started to arc round the brushes - lighting up the underneath of the saw table. I took out the brushes but couldn't see anything wrong. There was about 10mm of carbon and when reinserted the spring was compressed so the brush was pressing against the commutator. Is there anything else that could be wrong and is straightforward to check out and deal with? The saw is a Bosch GKS 85S http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php?title=Motor_repair |
#3
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On 06/07/2011 17:13, Frank Stacey wrote:
The electric motor in my circular saw has started to arc round the brushes - lighting up the underneath of the saw table. I took out the brushes but couldn't see anything wrong. There was about 10mm of carbon and when reinserted the spring was compressed so the brush was pressing against the commutator. Is there anything else that could be wrong and is straightforward to check out and deal with? The saw is a Bosch GKS 85S Normally a symptom of one or more armature windings being open circuit, so there is no back emf as the brushes pass from one pair of commutator segments to the next. Test (with power off) by using a multimeter between each opposite pair of segments. The resistance should be sensibly constant. If a winding is open circuit, it's normally time for a new armature, but it's just possible that one end of the winding has become detached from the commutator, in chich case re-soldering might be possible. -- Kevin Poole |
#4
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![]() "Frank Stacey" wrote in message ... The electric motor in my circular saw has started to arc round the brushes - lighting up the underneath of the saw table. I took out the brushes but couldn't see anything wrong. There was about 10mm of carbon and when reinserted the spring was compressed so the brush was pressing against the commutator. Is there anything else that could be wrong and is straightforward to check out and deal with? The saw is a Bosch GKS 85S -- Frank Stacey 10 mm sounds a little short to me, although I don't know this saw. Check for spares on the web, you will sometimes find a photo or a diagram like this http://www.powertoolspares.com/tool/...7a000/spares/# (might need to zoom in to get it to load properly) |
#5
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On Jul 6, 7:23*pm, Kevin Poole
wrote: On 06/07/2011 17:13, Frank Stacey wrote: The electric motor in my circular saw has started to arc round the brushes - lighting up the underneath of the saw table. I took out the brushes but couldn't see anything wrong. There was about 10mm of carbon and when reinserted the spring was compressed so the brush was pressing against the commutator. Is there anything else that could be wrong and is straightforward to check out and deal with? The saw is a Bosch GKS 85S Normally a symptom of one or more armature windings being open circuit, so there is no back emf as the brushes pass from one pair of commutator segments to the next. Test (with power off) by using a multimeter between each opposite pair of segments. The resistance should be sensibly constant. If a winding is open circuit, it's normally time for a new armature, but it's just possible that one end of the winding has become detached from the commutator, in chich case re-soldering might be possible. -- Kevin Poole The above is right. However the price of an armature is probably something stupid. Probably not economic to repair. Which of course is the intention. BTW just connect your multi-meter (on lowest resistance setting) across the brushes and rotate the armature slowly by hand. The need will wave about gently. If it goes down abruptly at one point your armature is US and unlikely to be fixable. |
#6
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On Jul 7, 8:55*am, harry wrote:
On Jul 6, 7:23*pm, Kevin Poole wrote: On 06/07/2011 17:13, Frank Stacey wrote: The electric motor in my circular saw has started to arc round the brushes - lighting up the underneath of the saw table. I took out the brushes but couldn't see anything wrong. There was about 10mm of carbon and when reinserted the spring was compressed so the brush was pressing against the commutator. Is there anything else that could be wrong and is straightforward to check out and deal with? The saw is a Bosch GKS 85S Normally a symptom of one or more armature windings being open circuit, so there is no back emf as the brushes pass from one pair of commutator segments to the next. Test (with power off) by using a multimeter between each opposite pair of segments. The resistance should be sensibly constant. If a winding is open circuit, it's normally time for a new armature, but it's just possible that one end of the winding has become detached from the commutator, in chich case re-soldering might be possible. -- Kevin Poole The above is right. However the price of an armature is probably something stupid. Probably not economic to repair. Which of course is the intention. BTW just connect your multi-meter (on lowest resistance setting) across the brushes and rotate the armature slowly by hand. The need will wave about gently. If it goes down abruptly at one point your armature is US and unlikely to be fixable. A Bosch may well be worth a rewind. But I'm not fully convinced by this diagnosis. NT |
#7
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On Jul 7, 8:55*am, harry wrote:
The above is right. However the price of an armature is probably something stupid. Probably not economic to repair. Which of course is the intention. £100 + VAT - which is a lot for a handheld circular saw. |
#8
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On 06/07/2011 22:15, newshound wrote:
"Frank Stacey" wrote in message ... The electric motor in my circular saw has started to arc round the brushes - lighting up the underneath of the saw table. I took out the brushes but couldn't see anything wrong. There was about 10mm of carbon and when reinserted the spring was compressed so the brush was pressing against the commutator. Is there anything else that could be wrong and is straightforward to check out and deal with? The saw is a Bosch GKS 85S -- Frank Stacey 10 mm sounds a little short to me, although I don't know this saw. Check for spares on the web, you will sometimes find a photo or a diagram like this http://www.powertoolspares.com/tool/...7a000/spares/# (might need to zoom in to get it to load properly) That's a great site. The exploded view of my machine could be very helpful. I tried measuring armature winding resistance via the brushes. Nothing seemed suspicious - the readings were all about 1.5ohm. WikiDiy almost as helpful as his group and encourages me to expose the commutator for visual inspection and possibly cleaning up. Thanks everybody. |
#9
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On 07/07/2011 08:55, harry wrote:
On Jul 6, 7:23 pm, Kevin wrote: On 06/07/2011 17:13, Frank Stacey wrote: The electric motor in my circular saw has started to arc round the brushes - lighting up the underneath of the saw table. I took out the brushes but couldn't see anything wrong. There was about 10mm of carbon and when reinserted the spring was compressed so the brush was pressing against the commutator. Is there anything else that could be wrong and is straightforward to check out and deal with? The saw is a Bosch GKS 85S Normally a symptom of one or more armature windings being open circuit, so there is no back emf as the brushes pass from one pair of commutator segments to the next. Test (with power off) by using a multimeter between each opposite pair of segments. The resistance should be sensibly constant. If a winding is open circuit, it's normally time for a new armature, but it's just possible that one end of the winding has become detached from the commutator, in chich case re-soldering might be possible. -- Kevin Poole The above is right. However the price of an armature is probably something stupid. Probably not economic to repair. Which of course is the intention. Yup. My table saw has gone exactly the same way (Performance Power Pro). Spares apparently not available ... until I spotted that Axminster used to sell the identical machine (except for colour and badging). £110 for a new one - I didn't even ask whether that was plus or inc. VAT ![]() SteveW |
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