When you turn it on does it just hum? If you use a pencil to start the blade moving, does it continue to move or just slow to a stop?
When you turn it on does it just hum? If you use a pencil to start the blade moving, does it continue to move or just slow to a stop?
Electra Townie 7D
it used to hum and then I would give it a manual kick-start, but it doesn't do either now. Dead??
it really is a shame, because outwardly it's essentially new. I guess I have to take it to the recycling depot. Thanks for the info!
that's disappointing.
I had a similar thing happen with my toaster oven- the heating element broke, but the repair guy said it's cheaper to buy a new one than to fix it. I even said "that's OK, just fix it anyway" and he said he wouldn't- not worth his trouble.
Not to get on my soapbox (but here I go stepping up anyway), but this irritates me about our "disposable" society. Something is made of poor quality, it breaks, and you have to throw it away and buy a new one. I'd rather spend more, have it last longer, and even pay to repair it than to always have the only option to be to throw it away. Grrr... (climbing down, now).
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How much did it cost? I mean... if you wanted to conduct some sort of science experiment, I'm sure there are directions online on how to wind a relatively simple AC motor.
(this comes with the disclaimer that you'd have to be very careful, yadda yadda, don't burn or electrocute yourself, don't chew on cables or touch two things at once and complete any circuits or ground live wires.) FWIW, it probably wouldn't be that much of a stretch to get an insulated wire of a slightly larger gauge than was originally in the fan and solder the connections, but the bind you'd run into there is if it was originally engineered to use a stupidly fine gauge so the proper gauge would never fit. Tiny wires reap the benefit of a greater surface area for better conduction but if the resistance is too high, they overheat very very easily, and heat lowers the conduction of a surface anyway. :/ Kind of a bummer, but yeah, if they can churn out a few hundred thousand and assume that when A breaks you'll buy B, they still profit more by making an inferior (but cheaper) product. Shame.
Anyway, I was looking around and found some directions that seem plausible. My original disclaimer still stands though. Nothing ventured, nothing gained, and if you fail, well, it was sort of broken already. Can't kill what's already dead, as I like to say.
http://www.ehow.com/how_7656697_do-r...an-motors.html
http://www.wikihow.com/Rewind-an-Electric-Motor
Before going too deeply into this, you might want to figure out if it's an AC or DC application. My bet is it's a DC motor with a transformer somewhere inside it, so you can plug it into your regular AC outlet and it uses DC so you don't notice the (albeit really fast) oscillation between currents. HTH!![]()
Last edited by Kitsune06; 04-25-2011 at 01:08 PM.
What Kit said, or if you don't feel comfortable trying it yourself, I'm pretty sure an alternator place would do it for you. That, or maybe a local appliance repair place.
I just went through the same thing with a microwave. We DID get the magnetron replaced - sure we could've had a new unit for the same price, but why? This way we kept a little bit of money local, the labor costs anyway, and a lot of microwave out of the landfill. I think the repair guy thought I was crazy, but eventually I was able to talk him into taking my money.![]()
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
I totally agree with you! Everything is made to be broken these days so that consumers keep buying products. When my 18 year old washing machine needed replacing (still worked but was very inefficient), I was told that machines these days will only last about 10 year.
It's fine and dandy for the manufacturers, but the amount of garbage that this results in sounds just too reckless IMHO. Sure, some bits can be recycled, but I think people by and large just take them to the dump and be done with it.
I'm not going to tinker with it, I'm so mechanically disinclined all I'll end up doing is making a mess. So, I'll just take it to the recyling depot and hope that it will be dismantled and disposed of properly.