05-11-2022, 07:46 PM
I had to do some field repairs on a big vacuum cleaner last week. We typically run it of a 70 KVA gen. set. The repair (which I don't think matters, but here it is anyway) was to tighten all the connections and delete one jumper that fried the contact. Both the momentary on and off switches (same except for color) have have three terminals; N.O., N.C., and Common. The on switch had a jumper connecting the the N.O. and N.C. terminals and there was a wire on each of them. The only thing I could think it could possible accomplish is if there was another "start" switch. Similar but smaller vac.s have a coil around one of the "load" lines that will start the vac when the equipment is started. (This vac does not have an on/off/auto switch.) With that modification, it started right up. Except.... the phases were wired to the gen set in the wrong order. Got huge dust clouds real fast! I bet it cleaned the HEPA filters too. I swapped two leads and all was well.
So that's the background, and it works as it should. Now the Contractor who owns this rig says that it never would run backwards before. If the phase were wrong it would illuminate a red light and it wouldn't start.
I cannot figure out how a circuit could prevent the coil from being energized when there are still three (correct) possible variations of how the 3ph line can be connected and still maintain correct rotation. An' how in the helll does it know when to turn that light on?
So that's the background, and it works as it should. Now the Contractor who owns this rig says that it never would run backwards before. If the phase were wrong it would illuminate a red light and it wouldn't start.
I cannot figure out how a circuit could prevent the coil from being energized when there are still three (correct) possible variations of how the 3ph line can be connected and still maintain correct rotation. An' how in the helll does it know when to turn that light on?
Sign at N.E. Vocational School Cabinetmaking Shop 1976, "Free knowledge given daily... Bring your own container"