Dr Jefyll wrote:
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Funny thing, every motor and pump belongs to a car!
Yes, I should've remembered that before assuming the drive motor ran on 115VAC!
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and some 1v5KE51CA (43v ish breakdown and bidirectional). Would either of those TVS Diodes work in place of 2 watt zener?
A 43 ish bidirectional TVS sounds good to me.
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Im not sure the current limiter or torque limiter works as intended.
Perhaps it's not working, or perhaps my hasty inferences regarding that circuit are incorrect. It might be helpful if you have any documentation that comments on the function of the 20K potentiometer, P1. Meanwhile, if the transfer gears aka shear pins seem satisfactory as torque limiters, then maybe you can just rely on that!
-- Jeff
Hi Jeff,
Cool! I will make another perf board with some stak-ons (have a lot of board mount ones) and the TVS diodes.
Ill let you know how it ends up.
I have attached the only mention of the P1 pot in an old service manual for the older model.
The boards are close cousins. Some differences but it looks like the motor control section is identical.
The manual is definitely a poor translation from German to English. And the entire section that relates to the transformer board doesn’t exist.
This manual refers to the ATL 2 and 3 which are late 80s machines. There is no mention of it in the service manual that goes with my 2300.
I think you're right that it relates to the stall current but on my machine the way it acts is different.
When it starts, it does a half turn probably to find home, then a 3 or 4 full rotations. All of the ATL 2x00 ive seen act the same way.
I don't remember how the ATL 2 and 3s started up, long time ago.
I have a wonderful FujiMoto CP-51 paper processor made in Japan with AC motors and pumps (100v AC). Considering how leaky it can be, it’s a little terrifying that they chose AC instead of DC.
Though I see why, they needed a lot of consistent torque at a relatively low speed, also had to have an adjustable speed for various paper and chemistry types.
I think the most important part was space considerations. No room for a giant transformer and rectifiers. It is after all a tabletop processor (as in it takes up an entire tabletop).
There is an emergency drain in the bottom of the processor, though it really looks like an afterthought.
They also mounted the motors and connection blocks to the top of the case in the hope it wouldn't get wet.
Best laid plans as they say, when a hose leaks its always on the pressure side and can form a nice jet. Without fail its always aimed at something you don't want to get wet.
And do I have stories on this one. Had to do some major surgery on it, the PiD temp controllers died and I had to make a new one. It isn't pretty but it works!