Bob008
Established Member
As above can anyone recommend a good electrical engineer around the north west area I’m having trouble with a powermatic machine
Thanks bobby
Thanks bobby
They normaly work on vehicles with 12 / 24 volt Dc systems and not mains powered Ac machinery.I’m thinking of asking an auto electrician to have a look but unsure if it’s there sort of thing
I assume this is a DOL starter. If it is, I would check that any emergency stops are in the "normally closed " position i.e not activated. If the machine runs when you hold in the start button, then the coil seems ok - the issue is with the "hold in ".having trouble with my drum sander it’s a powermatic pm 2244 the display is not working and doesn’t switch on the drum motor runs whilst I keep the start button pressed but then stops once I let go obviously the conveyor doesn’t work either as it’s not getting any information from the display panel
Hopefully someone can help
Thanks bobby
Maybe this will help , you can at least check that power is getting to the right parts.
View attachment 137802
On the face of it, that sounds like daylight robbery.No I’ve identified the problem is a small transformer the size of my fingernail cost me £350 for a company to send out an engineer only to inform me the part is unavailable atm so I’m stuck with a unusable machine
What’s your problem
I totally agree and they actually tried to charge me an extra 2 hours of labour the company is called northern electrical based in blackburn lancashireOn the face of it, that sounds like daylight robbery.
Get a photo of the part and the part number and we should be able to find it, or pull up a datasheet and get an equivalent.
To identify this as the problem you must have tried to measure the primary and secondary voltages, transformers are normally very reliable. If this is on a PCB then it is more than likely it supplies the power to the control circuitry, 5 volts is common but 12 / 24 / 48 are also found. Now these voltages will be Dc so following that transformer will be a rectifier which are more prone to fail than a transformer.No I’ve identified the problem is a small transformer the size of my fingernail
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