Gallery, Projects and General > How do I??

Chester 626 Mill

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Arbalist:
I'd just have a measure up and then pop along to machine mart and get a replacement single phase motor. It will be a darn sight easier to wire up and cost a lot less than a three phase and inverter. Don't be put off by any rubbish that Chester may have fitted, a decent single phase motor will likely last many years.

JohnC:
Hi Lyn,

I have a Chester 626 mill which I converted to use a 3-phase motor via an inverter.  There was nothing wrong with the original set up, but I favour the flexibility and smoothness of 3-phase -  I would not go back to single phase……..

I still have the original motor, which can be yours with a moderate cash adjustment.  This has the great advantage of a like for like swap, but you are not improving your machine!  I fitted a 1.5 HP 3-phase motor which bolted straight on and used the original pulleys.  I just leave the belts on the 1000 RPM setting and adjust the motor speed as needed.  I can dig out the motor spec and supplier if you like.  I can’t recall it being too expensive.

The inverter came from a chap who regularly advertises on John Stevenson’s Home and Workshop site, and, I believe, on a certain auction site.  He supplied a remote ‘pendant’ for ON/OFF,  FWD/REV, speed, JOG and EMERG STOP, which I fitted to the front of the lid of the mill.  I can supply more details if you like.  Again, this was not overly expensive.

As has been said, it is your mill and your money, but I find the 3-phase set up so much better than the single-phase one; even just using an edge finder, with one twiddle of the speed knob I can set 150 RPM, then once the edge is found I can wind up to 1000 RPM for small hole drilling - in no time! 

Hope that is of some use.

Best regards,
John

kayzed1:

--- Quote from: JohnC on November 25, 2015, 01:26:46 PM ---Hi Lyn,

I have a Chester 626 mill which I converted to use a 3-phase motor via an inverter.  There was nothing wrong with the original set up, but I favour the flexibility and smoothness of 3-phase -  I would not go back to single phase……..

I still have the original motor, which can be yours with a moderate cash adjustment.  This has the great advantage of a like for like swap, but you are not improving your machine!  I fitted a 1.5 HP 3-phase motor which bolted straight on and used the original pulleys.  I just leave the belts on the 1000 RPM setting and adjust the motor speed as needed.  I can dig out the motor spec and supplier if you like.  I can’t recall it being too expensive.



sent you an E-Mail John. Thanks..
Lyn.

The inverter came from a chap who regularly advertises on John Stevenson’s Home and Workshop site, and, I believe, on a certain auction site.  He supplied a remote ‘pendant’ for ON/OFF,  FWD/REV, speed, JOG and EMERG STOP, which I fitted to the front of the lid of the mill.  I can supply more details if you like.  Again, this was not overly expensive.

As has been said, it is your mill and your money, but I find the 3-phase set up so much better than the single-phase one; even just using an edge finder, with one twiddle of the speed knob I can set 150 RPM, then once the edge is found I can wind up to 1000 RPM for small hole drilling - in no time! 

Hope that is of some use.

Best regards,
John

--- End quote ---

Will_D:

--- Quote from: JohnC on November 25, 2015, 01:26:46 PM ---The inverter came from a chap who regularly advertises on John Stevenson’s Home and Workshop site, and, I believe, on a certain auction site.

--- End quote ---
I didn't know John had a site. Tried to find it but couldn't.

Anyone have a link please?

Bluechip:
Will

This:

http://www.homeworkshop.org.uk/

Dave

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