augiedoggy
Well-Known Member
Spellman, sorry the setup isn't working right, I probably should have waiting to run a full batch of grain before posting. Did you start with a full hopper? My test run was only a pound of grain which only filled the hopper maybe a fourth of the way up; I guess I need to try a full hopper myself.
As far as the motor reversing by itself when it jams ( if I'm reading that correctly ) I believe that is probably normal; I read one post where a guy hooked one of these motors up with no start capacitor and it still ran but it would randomly choose which direction to start turning in, this leads me to believe that if you prevent it turning one direction it will go the other direction regardless of which side of the cap it's getting power from, I think this applies to all reversible gear motors not just this particular one.
If you want to try an experiment you could wire up 2 of the caps you received in parallel which would be the equivalent of a 10MFD cap. I've read that you can "hotrod" a AC gear motor this way to generate more torque ( it won't run any faster however ), the down side is the motor will run hot and it will shorten the life of the motor dramatically. However since the milling process time is relatively short it might be possible to get several runs out of it before the motor croaked. At $27 buck each you could go through 4 or 5 cheap motors and still come out cheaper than buying a $180 motor. It's just a thought and if you were to try that experiment I wouldn't wander too far away from the power switch when you start it up!:cross:
Here's a wiring diagram showing a 2.5MFD cap added for more torque wired in through a second switch for a total of 7.5MFD, the second switch could be used to cut in the extra capacitance when the motor starts bogging down.
Augiedoggy, yeah that's the great thing about Lovejoy couplings, pretty much impossible to jump gears.
I had service call on a UV flatbed printer about a month ago were one of those couplers failed and took out 6k in printheads.. .. I'm very familiar with them and in this type of application they should work very well but my issue is that my motor is also only 60 rpm and this was too slow to reliably grind without causing the gears to jump and bind.
I have since bought pulleys at tractor supply and as soon as I am home this weekend I will have everything together to test out.
Fyi it was plastic gears from the Xerox machine I was using on the motor and mill shaft...
Funny thing Is I have a whole box of those capacitors... I wanted to buy two for my old metal halide salt water reef tank lights a few years back and the seller ended up sending me a whole box of like 20 of them.... been finding all sorts of uses for them