Salvage Hauls

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Salvage Hauls

Viewing 14 posts - 1 through 14 (of 14 total)
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  • #262688
    MW
    Participant
      @mw27036

      Hi, So as the name suggests, i'm thinking this could be a place for anyone to display any useful bits and pieces they may have collected out of old, broken and disused items, to demonstrate it's amazing what you don't have to pay for!

      Here are some gubbins i managed to get out of an old asda pressure washer, from around the motor and gearbox section..

      img00737-20161024-1124.jpg

      So, some decent M5 socket screws from the aluminium casing, a 10mm-ish steel shaft that could be turned again, a large ball race and some open face bearings and a steel gear, not quite sure what they could be useful for but anyone is welcome to post their findings too or any ideas with what to do with them.

      Michael W

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      #30583
      MW
      Participant
        @mw27036
        #262710
        Frances IoM
        Participant
          @francesiom58905

          I was just about to ask re a number of domestic heating pumps obtained from my favourite scrappy

          pumps.jpg

          all are same maker though different in small details – though I can find the manufacturer's documents they don't state the spindle speed nor how to get the pump rotor off the shaft – has any one else found a use for these small c 90W motors ?

          Edited By Frances IoM on 24/10/2016 13:56:03

          #262730
          Roger Williams 2
          Participant
            @rogerwilliams2

            Hello all, found this lathe tool sitting on top of a huge pile of scrap in a skip, with no insert in it . A box of DNMG inserts for £8 off ebay , £3 for a screw and shim, milled a few thou off the top, bingo, a cracking addition for the workshop !!.

            Didnt come with the holder of course.12092016192.jpg

            #262756
            MW
            Participant
              @mw27036

              Hi guys, thanks for the responses,

              Frances IoM, thats a pretty good haul, they are definitely useful as these small DC motors can be used to make a power leadscrew for a mini lathe with the appropriate speed controller curcuit from ebay, at around £10 cost, get a mini plug type transformer and a centre on off on, switch and you've got a reversable speed controlled motor!

              I'm gonna take a shot in the dark and say i reckon the shaft speed would be around 6000rpm without any gearing, you could obviously take it down a notch with the gearing or a pulley, the shaft speed is normally pretty high without it. Going by the size of it i think it might be a 24v motor? 

              Roger W, thats an amazing find for a scrap yard, looks like a premium holder, I want to stake out your scrapyards at some point!wink

              I'll stay tuned because i'm always turning up new junk from somewhere and doubtless others will be too!

              Michael W

              Edited By Michael Walters on 24/10/2016 17:08:35

              #262760
              Nick_G
              Participant
                @nick_g
                Posted by Michael Walters on 24/10/2016 17:07:45:

                Hi guys, thanks for the responses,

                Frances IoM, thats a pretty good haul, they are definitely useful as these small DC motors

                Going by the size of it i think it might be a 24v motor?

                .

                Michael, It says 240 volts and AC on it. – Take your swarf protection glasses off. cheeky

                Nick

                #262762
                Frances IoM
                Participant
                  @francesiom58905

                  they are all 240V a/c motors with a 2.5uF start capacitor – 24Vdc would have been very convenient (tho did pick up a 12V window winder)
                  I’m away from my workshop so can’t check speed but my guess is nearer 600rpm than 6000! so somewhere there is probably a gear once I work out how to get the pump rotor off

                  #262769
                  JasonB
                  Moderator
                    @jasonb

                    Frances, if run dry these motors get very hot, much too hot to touch and if you put water through them in that state they will flash to steam.

                    You should be able to slide the whole rotor and impellor out of the housing but they can corrode but don't think you will find any gears, speed control is all electronic

                    make quite economical pond pumps

                    #262772
                    Frances IoM
                    Participant
                      @francesiom58905

                      I’ve just been running one for maybe 15min – yes it get slightly warm but not hot at least as felt on outer case – 2 are switchable between 3 speeds – it seems by switching windings – they run v quiet when pump rotor is in vertical plane – when in horizontal there is some noise that might be gearing – are they not sealed from the pumped liquid ?

                      #262774
                      Roger Williams 2
                      Participant
                        @rogerwilliams2

                        Michael, the skip was outside of an engineering business/ hydraulics repair shop (Derek Lane & Co near Exeter, now moved ). It makes me wonder what else they chucked away. Scrapyards wont let people wander around them down here …. health and safety.

                        #262780
                        martin perman 1
                        Participant
                          @martinperman1

                          my usual haul comes from my work, when we install a large industrial washing machine, 3m wide 4m long and 4m high, it comes in kit form, the parts of the machine have to go through a standard door.

                          To build the machine lifting jigs or trolleys to move the parts are supplied by our Italian parents all made from 316 stainless 10mm thick with 20mm axles, we are told to bin it when we have finished, the young engineers dont want it so I and a colleague share it, some of the best bits are transport plates two metres long 150 wide and 6mm thick with a few holes in it.

                          I used to collect casters made of stainless with nylon wheels by the hundred off of equipment which is wheeled out of a truck and into a building where we replaced them with feet to stand on.

                          Martin P

                          #262803
                          John Baguley
                          Participant
                            @johnbaguley78655

                            Frances,

                            I'm sure that the bearings on the ch pumps are water lubricated which is why they are not sealed from the liquid. I doubt if they will last long being run dry. As Jason suggests, they can be used for pond pumps but are not self priming. I've never found them to last very long in that application though.

                            John

                            #262821
                            Nicholas Farr
                            Participant
                              @nicholasfarr14254

                              Hi Frances, your C/H pumps are not really much good for anything but circulating the water in a C/H system. As has been said, yes they need the water in the bearings for lubrication and the bearings a very likely to be ceramic. The coils and the electronics are totally sealed from the water, but the rotor and shaft continuously run in water and that's the reason for the big screwdriver plug on the back, so as to be able to remove any air inside to insure they are full of water. There are no gears inside, the impellor is fix directly onto the rotor shaft and they don't run very fast and if they pump very dirty water they will soon jam up and burn out, which is what happens to most of them in C/H systems without any anti-corrosion additive. They won't even pump a very high head of water either. Never tried them as coolant pumps, but if you do, you'll have to keep the coolant free from even the smallest size of swarf, especially ferrous metals.

                              Regards Nick.

                              #262823
                              Clive Hartland
                              Participant
                                @clivehartland94829

                                Every year before I start my heating system I undo the plug and rotate the spindle and it does sometimes feel very gritty to turn. It all runs fine after that. They are not very powerful and only push the water at a low pressure. You might have to split the impeller boss to get it off.

                                Clive

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