C45YV Dynamo repair

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David Edgar
Posts: 37
Joined: Sun Dec 30, 2012 8:44 pm
Location: El Cajon, California

C45YV Dynamo repair

Post by David Edgar » Mon Jun 02, 2014 9:06 am

I have traced my TC dynamo problem to a short to ground in the field windings. I had rebuilt the dynamo many, many years ago and vaguely remember some insulation issues back then but possibly the issue has risen again. At any rate, in looking at how to disassemble the dynamo I see where I had soldered one field winding lead to the F terminal inside. I again vaguely remember doing that as that is the way I had found it upon dis-assembly. It was a real bear to unsolder and then solder back in place then. This time before I go through the hassle I am wondering if that is the proper method of connection. All the other leads inside are attached with screw terminals to make dis-assembly and reassembly easy. Can anyone verify if the original field winding lead attaches directly to the F terminal via soldering or if there is a mechanical connection (screw terminal or ?) to make it more convenient?
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dynamo.jpg
dynamo.jpg (18.38 KiB) Viewed 2480 times
David Edgar, 1948 TC 5108 / XPAG 5801
Owned since November 1967

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Gene Gillam
Posts: 1275
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2013 4:52 pm
Location: Saucier, MS

Re: C45YV Dynamo repair

Post by Gene Gillam » Wed Jun 04, 2014 4:29 pm

David,

Mine is soldered...

Gene

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David Edgar
Posts: 37
Joined: Sun Dec 30, 2012 8:44 pm
Location: El Cajon, California

Re: C45YV Dynamo repair

Post by David Edgar » Thu Jun 19, 2014 4:08 pm

Well I finally traced my dynamo field winding short to ground. Each of the two field windings wrap around iron cores and there are little tabs on the core to retain the windings. Over many years, one of the tabs wore through the insulation wrapping and shorted out the coils. What I will attempt is to coat the areas around where the tabs are with some polyurethane insulator goop that I kept when I rewound a pool pump motor 30 years ago. In that case I wound the motor and then brushed this stuff on and let it ooze into the windings to hold them in place on the spinning armature. I may put a piece of wire insulator in the depressed area as extra precaution and let the poly stuff hold it in place. I will take more photos at that stage
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insulator material
insulator material
Red arrows show tab and where tab rests and wore through.  Note that the iron core has been turned over in relation to the windings here.
Red arrows show tab and where tab rests and wore through. Note that the iron core has been turned over in relation to the windings here.
Red arrows show tab and where tab rests and wore through.
Red arrows show tab and where tab rests and wore through.
David Edgar, 1948 TC 5108 / XPAG 5801
Owned since November 1967

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