Greetings all;

As I install the motor on my mini-lathe, it occurs to me that if I do a set 
of ice cube relays driven by those toys on the C41 board, it strikes me 
that with that huge flywheel fan combo, even an e-stop will coast several 
revolutions of the spindle.

When I did the PMDX-106 for the mill, I used 2 relays, one to switch 
between the output of the controller with its DPDT poles, the back side of 
which dropped a 10 ohm 20 watt resistor across the motor to make use of its 
generating ability as a means of stopping it fairly rapidly. As in 2500 
revs to zero in just a hair over 1 second.  The 2nd relay was used in the 
usual DPDT reversing circuit.

There isn't that much inertia in that setup, but this will have a cast iron 
fan cum flywheel that weighs a good 2 pounds to stop.  So a 10 ohm 20 
watter, taking the dump from 7000 rpm, is likely to be considerably hotter 
than bright red internally by the time its down to 100 rpms as that will 
translate to about a kilowatt of stored energy.

20 ohms won't have to take quite as much of a rapid thermal shock, but the 
wattage will be similar, so I don't see any way to make it work that 
doesn't involve a panel of at least 8 similar resistors.

Unless someone else has a better idea?  How about I find some sockets for 
the 500 watt halogen lamp sticks & use 2 of them in series?

Basically anything I can make off the local walmart shelves (for under 50 
bucks that is).

Cheers, Gene
-- 
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