09-12-2015, 12:17 PM
I purchased a Jet table (JTAS-10XL-1) recently that had a bad motor. Was looking at the prices of replacement motors and figured I should at least see if the current motor can be fixed before spending money on a replacement.
The previous owner told me that he turned the saw on one day and it didn't start. He replaced the on/off switch and tried starting it again and saw smoke coming out of the motor so he gave up and brought a new saw.
I have very little experience with motors so my research/knowledge is all from the web. The first thing I checked with the motor was the capacitors and both appear to be fine. I then took off the fan cover and fan and that's where I found at least one problem - the centrifugal switch had exploded:
I found a replacement part # for the switch so a new part is on the way. I'm a little concerned with only finding 3 springs as I see 4 springs on the replacement part picture.
My question pertains to the dust that is inside the motor housing. Can I just take an air compressor and jam it in those holes and blow out whatever dust I can? Or should I try and remove the casing and blow everything out? Anything else I should check on the saw while I have it apart? Or anything I should lube prior to putting back together?
Any help would be appreciated.
The previous owner told me that he turned the saw on one day and it didn't start. He replaced the on/off switch and tried starting it again and saw smoke coming out of the motor so he gave up and brought a new saw.
I have very little experience with motors so my research/knowledge is all from the web. The first thing I checked with the motor was the capacitors and both appear to be fine. I then took off the fan cover and fan and that's where I found at least one problem - the centrifugal switch had exploded:
I found a replacement part # for the switch so a new part is on the way. I'm a little concerned with only finding 3 springs as I see 4 springs on the replacement part picture.
My question pertains to the dust that is inside the motor housing. Can I just take an air compressor and jam it in those holes and blow out whatever dust I can? Or should I try and remove the casing and blow everything out? Anything else I should check on the saw while I have it apart? Or anything I should lube prior to putting back together?
Any help would be appreciated.