Goldfinger234
Member
To the OP. There’s a few things to consider. I work in commercial BMS controls and have long since lost count of the number of motors and VFD’s I’ve fitted and replaced.
If you change to single phase, your inrush current when starting the saw will greatly increase. Mine (3HP table saw) needs a C20 breaker to ensure it doesn’t trip off when starting with a dado set, and you’ll need to wire it via a 16A trailing socket as it’ll blow a 13A fuse every time, even with a normal blade.
The saw was more than likely originally fitted with an imperial motor, in which case you’d need an imperial motor to replace, otherwise the pulley won’t fit the shaft, and the bolting mount will be different. Hacking the mount to bits can be easier said than done, depending on available space and size of mount. Far easier to just but the right motor. Pulleys aren’t expensive though.
The VFD option would be best to eliminate inrush current on a domestic supply, just try and avoid the cheap tat otherwise you’ll be replacing it so often you’d wish you’d just bought a good one to begin with.
The other option is just to downgrade it to 2HP with a new pulley same size as the old. It may change the size of the belts slightly, but there’s loads of online pulley calculators to sort that out. Unless you’re using it commercially, you’ll never need a 3HP motor anyway. It’s one of the big myths of woodturning, so many people want bigger and bigger motors, when oversizing them does your electricity bills no good as induction motors are quite inefficient when used well within their capabilities. You’re better with a correctly sized motor than an oversized one.
If you change to single phase, your inrush current when starting the saw will greatly increase. Mine (3HP table saw) needs a C20 breaker to ensure it doesn’t trip off when starting with a dado set, and you’ll need to wire it via a 16A trailing socket as it’ll blow a 13A fuse every time, even with a normal blade.
The saw was more than likely originally fitted with an imperial motor, in which case you’d need an imperial motor to replace, otherwise the pulley won’t fit the shaft, and the bolting mount will be different. Hacking the mount to bits can be easier said than done, depending on available space and size of mount. Far easier to just but the right motor. Pulleys aren’t expensive though.
The VFD option would be best to eliminate inrush current on a domestic supply, just try and avoid the cheap tat otherwise you’ll be replacing it so often you’d wish you’d just bought a good one to begin with.
The other option is just to downgrade it to 2HP with a new pulley same size as the old. It may change the size of the belts slightly, but there’s loads of online pulley calculators to sort that out. Unless you’re using it commercially, you’ll never need a 3HP motor anyway. It’s one of the big myths of woodturning, so many people want bigger and bigger motors, when oversizing them does your electricity bills no good as induction motors are quite inefficient when used well within their capabilities. You’re better with a correctly sized motor than an oversized one.