I have a Porter-Cable pancake compressor, made in 1999, which currently
tends to show sparks from the motor housing when it is running. The
other day, it quit completely and then today, when I tested it, the
motor fired right up. 1) any one have any idea what the problem might
be? bad brushes? 2) something I can do myself or do I need to take it
to the shop? the one place around the corner seemed to think it would
need a new motor/pump combo, at a cost of $150. Yes, they too thought
that was silly. But, then again, that is when I told them that it was
dead. I don't know what they would say if I showed them the current
behavior. thanks in advance.
Lots of handy guys on this group that understand motors, certainly
better than me. I am a field mechanic, fixing my tools as I need to to
get them back on the job.
It sounds to me to be brushes, or a worn commutator, or both. Check
the windings and make sure they are still in good shape, insulated and
clean. Try blowing out the motor assembly and motor with another
compressor.
If it is brushes, you can fix it easily, if it is the commutator you
are toast. Available, but $$$. A bad capacitor would certainly keep
it from starting, but >generally< speaking if that was it, it wouldn't
start again later as if nothing was wrong. But a bad capacitor
wouldn't account for the sparks.
But for $150, you shouldn't have it fixed at all.
I just bought a Bostitch C265 refurb combo that had the following: a
six gallon 2 hp pancake compressor, 16 ga. finish nailer, 18 ga. brad
nailer, gauges, fittings, hose, brads and a one year warranty on all of
it. The cost was $199 to the door, and it was delivered in two days
from the day I purchased.
I was looking at new compressors when I found this deal as my favorite
little compressor I use all the time for the door/trim installs I do is
finally giving up. This is a $129 compressor, and the cost to repair
was around $65 in parts. I couldn't see putting that into a compressor
that has been on the job for almost 5 years. My experience is that I
will fix some part of a machine like this and it then some other 5 year
old part will break.
This stuff is getting so cheap, I am thinking that we are going where
we all fear, a totally disposable society. If I paid for the parts and
had someone fix the compressor, they charge a minumum $65 bench fee.
They would put the new parts on, but then it would be $130...
Robert
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> It sounds to me to be brushes, or a worn commutator, or both. Check
> the windings and make sure they are still in good shape, insulated and
> clean. Try blowing out the motor assembly and motor with another
> compressor.
>
> If it is brushes, you can fix it easily, if it is the commutator you
> are toast. Available, but $$$. A bad capacitor would certainly keep
> it from starting, but >generally< speaking if that was it, it wouldn't
> start again later as if nothing was wrong. But a bad capacitor
> wouldn't account for the sparks.
>
> But for $150, you shouldn't have it fixed at all.
Mixing motors, I fear. If it's a universal motor, it might have
brushes/commutator. They'll spark as part of the nature of the beast, just
like your router or other things with universal motors.
If an induction motor, it might have a capacitor, but it wouldn't spark long
before igniting, sparks not being part of the nature of the beast.
Brushes can easily be replaced. Not worth rebuilding a universal
commutator, that's for sure.
I'd check the motor "start" contacts and see that they are not pitted and
sticking or bouncing and arcing.
Don Dando
LarryLev <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I have a Porter-Cable pancake compressor, made in 1999, which currently
> tends to show sparks from the motor housing when it is running. The
> other day, it quit completely and then today, when I tested it, the
> motor fired right up. 1) any one have any idea what the problem might
> be? bad brushes? 2) something I can do myself or do I need to take it
> to the shop? the one place around the corner seemed to think it would
> need a new motor/pump combo, at a cost of $150. Yes, they too thought
> that was silly. But, then again, that is when I told them that it was
> dead. I don't know what they would say if I showed them the current
> behavior. thanks in advance.
>