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Re: Powerstat Type 10B Repair Help
Original poster: Vardan <vardan01@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Hi,
Variac brushes are "special". You really need just the "right
one". There is all kind of "magic" to brushes and how much winding
to winding voltage, current, power, etc. they take. Some people have
made them from other types of brushes, but I am not sure they run
them at the full variac rating and such to really stress them. If
they burn, they tend to destroy the windings so it is sort of a risk.
We used some very old variacs (20 years old and we got them used...)
that were in constant production use every day. Running at about 75%
of their current rating 16 hours a day (high-line, nominal, low-line
thing)... We never replaced brushes in them! I am just wondering
why some brushes wear out. Maybe there is a rough spot on the
surface or something. Ours had there fair share of "events", but
maybe the hydraulic breakers tended to prevent damage to
them. Perhaps if they are used hard in lighting applications they
simply do just wear down more...
If the brush is still operable, I would just leave the old warn one
in... Sometimes you can reposition the rotor so the brush holder is
closer giving you more wear distance.
Cheers,
Terry
At 05:12 PM 4/24/2006, you wrote:
Tesla list wrote:
Original poster: Mark Fergerson <mfergerson1@xxxxxxx>
I recently acquired a type 10B Powerstat for US$1.00 which is a
steal, but when I got it home I noticed that the wiper button is
missing. Can I just whittle a new one from say a D-cell center
carbon, or would that be too resistive? Any better suggestions
before I go ahead and burn the house down?
TIA
Mark L. Fergerson
Better to go to a motor shop and find a carbon brush as close as
you can to the size you need, then file it down. The "carbon" from
a flashlight cell tends to be very contaminated. The brush is
intended to have enough resistance so that the power lost do to the
current created when it shorts adjacent turns of the variac is acceptably low.
Ed