Dear All,
I have a 3 phase Rojek MSP 315 planer/thicknesser, which appears not to like the current hot weather :?
Workshop temperature has soared to 90 F this afternoon. Meanwhile, I've been surfacing a pile of softwood 3x1": so fairly easy work for such a machine
After about half an hour of this, the machine cut out for no obvious reason, but would re-start about a minute later and worked for another few minutes, before cutting out again. If re-started, even when left idling, the machine kept cutting out.
The cutting out became more and more frequent, till I had to stop work. An hour later, all seemed well for a while until the problem started again.
The Rojek manual (predictably enough) has been of no help.
Mechanically, nothing appears amiss. All the electrical line seems fine and no fuses have blown. I also investigated the possibility that the micro-switch may be causing trouble - but apparently not. Someone I know, thinks that the switchgear may have a thermal cutout?
The conclusion seems to be the the machine (like its operator) is suffering from having to work in such heat. Has anybody else ever experienced this and/or, is such a conclusion feasible?
I have a 3 phase Rojek MSP 315 planer/thicknesser, which appears not to like the current hot weather :?
Workshop temperature has soared to 90 F this afternoon. Meanwhile, I've been surfacing a pile of softwood 3x1": so fairly easy work for such a machine
After about half an hour of this, the machine cut out for no obvious reason, but would re-start about a minute later and worked for another few minutes, before cutting out again. If re-started, even when left idling, the machine kept cutting out.
The cutting out became more and more frequent, till I had to stop work. An hour later, all seemed well for a while until the problem started again.
The Rojek manual (predictably enough) has been of no help.
Mechanically, nothing appears amiss. All the electrical line seems fine and no fuses have blown. I also investigated the possibility that the micro-switch may be causing trouble - but apparently not. Someone I know, thinks that the switchgear may have a thermal cutout?
The conclusion seems to be the the machine (like its operator) is suffering from having to work in such heat. Has anybody else ever experienced this and/or, is such a conclusion feasible?