Yesterday, I took in an old Singer 327k that was having a problem with the foot control.
It had been retrofitted with a clamshell type foot control and, many times the owner would step on the pedal and nothing would happen. My first thought was a loose connection in the foot control or a bad wire between the foot control and the motor but neither turned out to be the issue.
To troubleshoot, you have to access the inside of the speed control. Turn the control over and pop off the big round cap. Remove the screw beneath and the other screw over by the hinge. BEFORE OPENING THE FOOT CONTROL, DISCONNECT POWER. EVERY PIECE OF METAL INSIDE THAT FOOT CONTROL IS "HOT" AT ONE TIME OR ANOTHER!
Many of these old Singer speed controllers use the carbon pile method of regulation. A ceramic cylinder is filled with smaller-than-dime-size graphite discs.
At one end of the cylinder is a stationary contact that serves a secondary purpose of holding the stack of carbon discs in place.
At the other end of the cylinder is a movable contact that pushes on the carbon pile when the pedal is pressed.
When the discs are at rest, they provide such a high level of resistance that no current flows to the motor. When the pedal is depressed and the discs are squeezed together, they allow current to flow to the motor. The tighter they are squeezed, the more current flows to the motor and the faster it runs.
When the pedal is fully depressed, an internal set of contacts in the speed control by-passes the carbon pile and shoots maximum current directly from the wall outlet to the motor.
Knowing this gives a hint on troubleshooting a speed control - If nothing happens until the pedal is fully depressed and then the motor runs at full speed, the issue is with the carbon pile or other rheostat used in regulating speed.
In this instance, I could see that no matter how much the pedal was pressed, the carbon pile was not being squeezed. It turned out that the stationary contact was bent and not holding up its end of the bargain. When the pedal was pressed, the carbon pile just slid to the other end of the cylinder without being compressed. No current was allowed to flow, so the motor didn't budge.
It took a couple of tries to bend the stationary contact to just the right spot - too much to the left and the motor hummed, even with the pedal not pressed; too much to the right and the motor didn't move until the pedal was almost to the floor.
You don't want current flowing to the motor when the pedal is at rest because heat could build up and cause a fire. A voltmeter would be a handy tool to determine the proper adjustment, but if you can see an air gap between either contact and the corresponding end of the carbon pile, no current is flowing.
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Thank you, Ed, for the best explanation ever.
ReplyDeleteBetty T
Whoops I think my original comment didn't get through
ReplyDeleteSO - thanks Ed
Can you look at my pedal control - it is just not working. I have put a little youtube showing it.
http://youtu.be/yr-AYblyaMo
Bill, I can't tell exactly what's wrong without holding the control in my hands but here are a few thoughts: 1. I don't see anything that looks misshapen or bent but the copper strips should be much closer to the plunger on the carbon pile when the foot control is at rest. 2. It's possible that the some of the carbon discs have crumbled and fallen away, making the carbon pile shorter than it originally was. 2. The ceramic cylinder may have slid out of position but I don't see any indication of that. 3. There may be an adjustment screw at the other end of the ceramic cylinder that would push the carbon stack closer to the copper strips. 4. If you do any adjusting or bending, make sure there is no current flow when the foot control is not actuated. -Ed
ReplyDeletespot on Ed, I took the ceramic cylinder out of its seating - and there was the problem. The nipple ( or what ever the protrusion is called - I guess that is the 'plunger') was loose - because the carbon discs had degraded. I guess that with the right carbon pile ,the nipple would push upwards and the copper shims would touch it and put pressure long before making contact with the live point.
ReplyDeleteSo it looks like I'll search for a second hand one ( actually it is cheaper to buy the whole machine with the foot pedal and keep the original for parts).
Thanks also for the tip at the end.
Bill
Where does one get replacement disks to populate the resistive cylinder? I just suffered a failure with a Necchi foot pedal based on the same operating principles, and when I opened the pedal up, the inner case was full of shattered discs. I need at least half as many as were originally in place. There was also plenty of carbon in the cylinder, and signs of arcing, as the failure I experienced was a continuous run without pressing the pedal.
ReplyDelete