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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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Recently (stupidly) bought a used 10" table saw. Set it up today and did
about 3 cuts before it tripped it's inbuilt circuit breaker. Reset it and turned it back on, it immediately tripped my main board and does so as soon as I try to start it. Any thoughts as to likely fault so I can determin if it's worth spending anymore money on. Thanks for any helpful suggestions. C |
#2
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On Apr 17, 5:06*pm, "Clanger" wrote:
Recently (stupidly) bought a used 10" table saw. Set it up today and did about 3 cuts before it tripped it's inbuilt circuit breaker. Reset it and turned it back on, it immediately tripped my main board and does so as soon as I try to start it. Any thoughts as to likely fault so I can determin if it's worth spending anymore money on. Thanks for any helpful suggestions. C Only you can test it to find out what bit's shorting out. We can't. If its a partial short on the motor it'll be simple to make it work without even needing to repair. For now, I'd suggest turning the blade round a bit before restarting it, if it then runs its fairly likely to be a partial motor short. NT |
#3
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On Sat, 17 Apr 2010 10:27:40 -0700 (PDT), NT
wrote: On Apr 17, 5:06*pm, "Clanger" wrote: Recently (stupidly) bought a used 10" table saw. Set it up today and did about 3 cuts before it tripped it's inbuilt circuit breaker. Reset it and turned it back on, it immediately tripped my main board and does so as soon as I try to start it. Any thoughts as to likely fault so I can determin if it's worth spending anymore money on. Thanks for any helpful suggestions. C Only you can test it to find out what bit's shorting out. We can't. If its a partial short on the motor it'll be simple to make it work without even needing to repair. For now, I'd suggest turning the blade round a bit before restarting it, if it then runs its fairly likely to be a partial motor short. Yup, I had that on an old washing machine motor. I squeezed another few months out of it by blowing the carbon out with an airline. Cheers, T i m |
#4
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![]() "Clanger" wrote in message ... Recently (stupidly) bought a used 10" table saw. Set it up today and did about 3 cuts before it tripped it's inbuilt circuit breaker. Reset it and turned it back on, it immediately tripped my main board and does so as soon as I try to start it. Any thoughts as to likely fault so I can determin if it's worth spending anymore money on. Thanks for any helpful suggestions. What has tripped on the CU? an MCB or the RCD Can you remove and inspect the carbon brushes? Inspect the commutator while they are out. -- Graham. %Profound_observation% |
#5
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NT explained :
On Apr 17, 5:06*pm, "Clanger" wrote: Recently (stupidly) bought a used 10" table saw. Set it up today and did about 3 cuts before it tripped it's inbuilt circuit breaker. Reset it and turned it back on, it immediately tripped my main board and does so as soon as I try to start it. Any thoughts as to likely fault so I can determin if it's worth spending anymore money on. Thanks for any helpful suggestions. C Only you can test it to find out what bit's shorting out. We can't. If its a partial short on the motor it'll be simple to make it work without even needing to repair. For now, I'd suggest turning the blade round a bit before restarting it, if it then runs its fairly likely to be a partial motor short. No clues were provided as to what types of device actually tripped - overload, MCB, RCD? -- Regards, Harry (M1BYT) (L) http://www.ukradioamateur.co.uk |
#6
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![]() "Harry Bloomfield" wrote in message . uk... NT explained : On Apr 17, 5:06 pm, "Clanger" wrote: Recently (stupidly) bought a used 10" table saw. Set it up today and did about 3 cuts before it tripped it's inbuilt circuit breaker. Reset it and turned it back on, it immediately tripped my main board and does so as soon as I try to start it. Any thoughts as to likely fault so I can determin if it's worth spending anymore money on. Thanks for any helpful suggestions. C Only you can test it to find out what bit's shorting out. We can't. If its a partial short on the motor it'll be simple to make it work without even needing to repair. For now, I'd suggest turning the blade round a bit before restarting it, if it then runs its fairly likely to be a partial motor short. No clues were provided as to what types of device actually tripped - overload, MCB, RCD? I wonder if the "inbuilt circuit breaker" was also an RCD? -- Graham. %Profound_observation% |
#7
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Clanger wrote in message
... Recently (stupidly) bought a used 10" table saw. Set it up today and did about 3 cuts before it tripped it's inbuilt circuit breaker. Reset it and turned it back on, it immediately tripped my main board and does so as soon as I try to start it. Any thoughts as to likely fault so I can determin if it's worth spending anymore money on. Thanks for any helpful suggestions. Thanks for the replies so far. The make/model is Performance FMTC10TSW. When it trips the CU, it trips the whole board and not just the circuit it is plugged in to. C |
#8
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On Apr 19, 6:56*am, "Clanger" wrote:
Clanger wrote in message ... Recently (stupidly) bought a used 10" table saw. Set it up today and did about 3 cuts before it tripped it's inbuilt circuit breaker. Reset it and turned it back on, it immediately tripped my main board and does so as soon as I try to start it. Any thoughts as to likely fault so I can determin if it's worth spending anymore money on. Thanks for any helpful suggestions. Thanks for the replies so far. The make/model is Performance FMTC10TSW. When it trips the CU, it trips the whole board and not just the circuit it is plugged in to. C Almost certanly an RCD trip then, not MCB. Really you need to properly fault find on it, but if you really cant then a couple things can be tried: 1. clean away carbon deposits on and aroud the motor very thoroughly 2. swap L & N wires in the plug. Either might work. NT |
#9
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On Mon, 19 Apr 2010 10:02:51 -0700 (PDT), NT
wrote: Almost certanly an RCD trip then, not MCB. Really you need to properly fault find on it, but if you really cant then a couple things can be tried: 1. clean away carbon deposits on and aroud the motor very thoroughly As I mentioned previously, that was what 'cured' my first RCD trip although it may not have been 100% the cause (see below). 2. swap L & N wires in the plug. My second (some months later) was a partial short from the motor windings to earth and it would trip the RCD by just plugging it in and not even turning it on at the wall (and yes my sockets are wired correctly). ;-) Cheers, T i m |
#10
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After serious thinking Clanger wrote :
When it trips the CU, it trips the whole board and not just the circuit it is plugged in to. That sounds like an RCD, is there a test button on the item which trips? In which case there is some leakage from L or N to the earth, which most probably is due to carbon (or moist sawdust) accumulating in the motor from the motor brushes. Try removing the motor, leaving it for a while on a warm radiator to dry out, then blowing it out via the vents with an air line. -- Regards, Harry (M1BYT) (L) http://www.ukradioamateur.co.uk |
#11
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Clanger wrote in message
om... Clanger wrote in message ... Recently (stupidly) bought a used 10" table saw. Set it up today and did about 3 cuts before it tripped it's inbuilt circuit breaker. Reset it and turned it back on, it immediately tripped my main board and does so as soon as I try to start it. Any thoughts as to likely fault so I can determin if it's worth spending anymore money on. Thanks for any helpful suggestions. Thanks for the replies so far. The make/model is Performance FMTC10TSW. When it trips the CU, it trips the whole board and not just the circuit it is plugged in to. Many thanks to you all for the suggestions and advice, it is very much appreciated. Probably going to be a week or so until I can follow up on your suggestions but I will do so and let you all know the outcome. Thanks again. C. |
#12
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Harry Bloomfield wrote:
After serious thinking Clanger wrote : When it trips the CU, it trips the whole board and not just the circuit it is plugged in to. That sounds like an RCD, is there a test button on the item which trips? In which case there is some leakage from L or N to the earth, which most probably is due to carbon (or moist sawdust) accumulating in the motor from the motor brushes. Try removing the motor, leaving it for a while on a warm radiator to dry out, then blowing it out via the vents with an air line. Ideal job for WD40 -- Dave - WD40 Liberation Front. |
#13
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On Saturday, April 17, 2010 at 5:06:11 PM UTC+1, Clanger wrote:
Recently (stupidly) bought a used 10" table saw. Set it up today and did about 3 cuts before it tripped it's inbuilt circuit breaker. Reset it and turned it back on, it immediately tripped my main board and does so as soon as I try to start it. Any thoughts as to likely fault so I can determin if it's worth spending anymore money on. Thanks for any helpful suggestions. C hi try checking the carbon brushes i think you will find that is the cause of your trouble easy to check turn over and remove the bottom cover and you will see the motor there is 2 brushes 1 at each side of the motor use a plane screwdriver to turn the access cover the brush should pop out if they are well worn replace it and same the other side.good luck joe |
#14
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