Re: Motor installation

2012-06-08 Thread curt george

Hello Dexter
No you do not have to cut a key slot in the acme screw shaft. Depending on 
your coupler all you need to do is tighten your set screw, (although I added 
a flat on mine.)
If you don't already have a coupler Tractor Supply has a number of love/joy 
couplers. I believe that they are the easiest couplers around, both to use 
as well as to dis-connect.
On my Legacy the end plate had holes and everything needed to mount your 
motor on the Legacy.
I opted to use a different method to mount my motor. (mainly because my 
motor was geared for what I thought was to slow.) So I went with a side 
mount and gears for my unit.
I also found that speaker wire worked well for me,when wiring my motor, Its 
cheap to buy, good looking and easy to work with. don't forget a good limit 
switch and to add a by-pass on it, to return the carriage back to the other 
end of the machine after the limit switch has been reached.

Good luck on this project.
Take a few pictures. and keep us posted on how it goes.
C.A.G.
- Original Message - 
From: Dexter Bland dexterbl...@gmail.com

To: Legacy Ornamental Mills legacy-ornamental-mills@googlegroups.com
Sent: Friday, June 08, 2012 8:14 PM
Subject: Motor installation



I have acquired a drive motor for the x-axis and have a question about
installation. The motor shaft and the coupling have key-way slots but
the end of the acme screw does not. Is there enough resistance that a
key-way slot will need to be cut on the end of the acme screw or would
the set screw placed into a recess created with a drill bit be
adequate? (you can find the Dayton 4Z131 that was the stock motor on e-
bay for $150 right now)
I have other parts to get for this upgrade and hope to get some more
assistance later on the wiring of the speed controller and limit
switches. General wiring I can handle, this smaller electronic stuff
is something I have little experience with.
Thanks
Dexter

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Re: Motor installation

2012-06-08 Thread Dexter Bland
Curt,
Thanks for the info. I found another Dayton motor (4Z128b) that has
more power and speed and has the same frame size for a great price.
The mounting holes, shaft size and shaft length were identical to the
standard motor set-up so it fits the end plate that was already on my
mill. I have ordered some limit switches that I think will be what I
need. The controller will have to wait on some more money to show up
in the bank account...
Dexter

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