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The Sajo mill is here

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John Hill:

--- Quote from: CrewCab on February 23, 2010, 03:33:28 PM ---Looks good from here  :beer:

CC

--- End quote ---

Yes! :thumbup:  It looks really good from the other end of the world! :bow:

Bernd:
Trion,

I'm just courious as what could be causing that. I also never heard of a ground fuse. But then the electrical codes are different over there. Well when your friend finds out let me know what it was. All I can think of is that the wiring is somehow messed up from a previous owner.

BTW, nice looking vice. Now all you need to do is paint the machine to match.  :D Just kidding.  :ddb:

Bernd

Darren:
You have a point Bernd, I would have considered it quite a dangerous situation to have a fused ground.... if this blows and the machine becomes live  :zap:

Trion, I think you may have your wires crossed  :scratch:

DMIOM:

--- Quote from: Bernd on February 23, 2010, 03:56:01 PM ---Trion,

I'm just courious as what could be causing that. I also never heard of a ground fuse. But then the electrical codes are different over there. Well when your friend finds out let me know what it was. All I can think of is that the wiring is somehow messed up from a previous owner.
....
--- End quote ---

The reference to ground "fuse" may be what we poor non-Nynorsk/Bokmål speakers would refer to as a "Ground Fault Interrupter" or "Earth Leakage Trip" / "Earth Leakage Circuit Breaker".


--- Quote ---.... BTW, nice looking vice. Now all you need to do is paint the machine to match.  :D Just kidding.  :ddb: ....
--- End quote ---

No no no - what you have to do is get the vice working for a living so it acquires the same hard working (hard living?) patina as the rest of the machine!  :whip:   - actually, maybe that's why subconciously you chose the less durable paint  :beer:

Dave

tinkerer:
When you say ground fuse, is it like a ground fault that when it senses an electrical current, it kills everything by kicking the circuit breaker in the plug in, disabling the entire circuit? It sounds like you describe the entire shop going dark, which would mean a fuse or breaker at the main is getting an overload.

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