Hardware overload.

Discussions of tools wether you bought them or made them yourself. Anything from screwdrivers to custom chucks and drilling rigs.
Post Reply
The Smoking Yeti
Posts: 1346
Joined: Tue Jan 10, 2012 4:55 pm
Contact:

Hardware overload.

Post by The Smoking Yeti »

Soooooo.... I am looking to purchase a good motor for all my shaping disc needs. What am I looking for? What do you guys use?
My pipemaking stream of conscience/ website:

http://yetipipe.tumblr.com/
User avatar
kkendall
Posts: 472
Joined: Thu Mar 01, 2007 1:15 pm
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Contact:

Re: Hardware overload.

Post by kkendall »

The Smoking Yeti wrote:Soooooo.... I am looking to purchase a good motor for all my shaping disc needs. What am I looking for? What do you guys use?
I'd recommend nothing less than 1/3 HP, 1725 RPM, TEFC (totally enclosed fan cooled)
User avatar
Me Tarzan
Posts: 24
Joined: Wed Nov 21, 2012 1:49 pm
Location: BURLeson, TX

Re: Hardware overload.

Post by Me Tarzan »

Depends on how frugal you plan of being. Pretty easy to find a 1.5-2hp treadmill that is toasted and salvage the motor and possibly the speed control. Someone on Craigslist might literally pay you to haul away their old treadmill.
Massis
Posts: 938
Joined: Thu Aug 26, 2010 9:05 am

Re: Hardware overload.

Post by Massis »

My main sanding motor used to be a 0.55kW (3/4 hp) , 1450 rpm which worked perfectly in my opinion. With 60grit wheels it eats briar and with 320grit is sands nice and smooth.

I've recently dedicated that motor to buffing and now use a 1.5Kw (2.1hp) 1450rpm 3-phase motor which is hooked up to 2 phase power (so it only delivers about 1/3 of its optimal torque at the moment) until I get my shopped equipped with 3-phase electricity.
This works pretty much the same obviously.

Anything over 2.5hp is basicly overkill to use for sanding afaic...
SammyT
Posts: 7
Joined: Mon Oct 01, 2012 12:14 pm

Hardware overload.

Post by SammyT »

I salvaged a baldor 1/2 hp 820 rpm motor from my family farm... Is that too slow for sanding? What would that be good for? It was free :D
It was formerly used with a grinding stone so if I can't find another use for it I can at least sharpen my tools with it I guess.

-Sam
User avatar
Sasquatch
Posts: 5147
Joined: Tue Jan 13, 2009 1:46 am

Re: Hardware overload.

Post by Sasquatch »

I think it will be fine. If not, you could always rig up a pulley to get something spinning faster on the business end.
ALL YOUR PIPE ARE BELONG TO US!
SammyT
Posts: 7
Joined: Mon Oct 01, 2012 12:14 pm

Hardware overload.

Post by SammyT »

I will test it out and see if its strong enough. There is an ancient Rockwell tablesaw with a motor I can harvest... I can always put it back on if we ever decide to recondition it. Thanks Sasquatch


-Sam
User avatar
d.huber
Posts: 2691
Joined: Mon Dec 12, 2011 9:28 pm
Location: Durham, NC
Contact:

Re: Hardware overload.

Post by d.huber »

I'm using a Baldor 1/2 HP motor spinning at 1725 rpm and am very happy. You'll pay a bit more for a Baldor, but damn is it a sweet motor. I use it for both sanding and buffing.
http://www.dshpipes.com

"Strive for excellence, not for what someone else accepts."
-Tyler Beard
SammyT
Posts: 7
Joined: Mon Oct 01, 2012 12:14 pm

Hardware overload.

Post by SammyT »

What kind of pulley system could I rig up to step up my rpm from 820 to 1700


-Sam
Massis
Posts: 938
Joined: Thu Aug 26, 2010 9:05 am

Re: Hardware overload.

Post by Massis »

Go to 1640rpm, the logical step. Just put a pulley on your motor and a pulley exactly half the diameter on the business end. (4" on the motor and 2" in the other end for example).

The most flexible solution would be 2 3-step pulleys, one on either end and offcourse mirror them because otherwise you'll just get 3 times the same speed :-P
SammyT
Posts: 7
Joined: Mon Oct 01, 2012 12:14 pm

Re: Hardware overload.

Post by SammyT »

Great thanks, I will look at the farm for a motor that will work better this weekend. I hold promise in my grandfathers collection of old motors, it seems they hide from you until you go digging under old fence posts and barbed wire :lol:. I think the table saw motor will work, but I didn't look at it extensively. Just said, hey there is a vintage rockwell table saw.
I would really rather not have to set up a pulley system, I actually removed the old rusty pulley wheel from the motor, probably just to have to put it back on, and it was a bear. :banghead:
Thanks for the help! :D
Post Reply