Using a 3 phase lift on a single phase supply
Using a 3 phase lift on a single phase supply
Author
Discussion

DKL

Original Poster:

4,862 posts

245 months

Friday 24th September 2010
quotequote all
short of installing 3 phase power, which I'm not going to, is this doable or not?
If so how and how much?

David

Smiler.

11,752 posts

253 months

Friday 24th September 2010
quotequote all
Change the motor from three to single - not a good idea if actually possible.

Get a generator - expensive.



freecar

4,249 posts

210 months

Friday 24th September 2010
quotequote all
You could get an invertor, but again expensive!

Best bet, washing machine motor, some bodgery/general machining ét voila a single phase lift!

stuttgartmetal

8,125 posts

239 months

Friday 24th September 2010
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not without a 1 phase motor change

schmokin1

1,222 posts

235 months

Friday 24th September 2010
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how practicable might it be to change the motor for a domestic 240v supply do we think? Pro's need the lift to whizz up and down, but the average hammer chewer (ie mebiggrin) wouldn't be bothered if it took longer to lift...

DKL

Original Poster:

4,862 posts

245 months

Friday 24th September 2010
quotequote all
I wondered about somehting like this
http://www.machinemart.co.uk/shop/product/details/...


Smiler.

11,752 posts

253 months

Friday 24th September 2010
quotequote all
DKL said:
I wondered about somehting like this
http://www.machinemart.co.uk/shop/product/details/...
.....or one of them smile

schmokin1

1,222 posts

235 months

netherfield

3,060 posts

207 months

Friday 24th September 2010
quotequote all
If it's just the one motor,then converting to single phase is the best option.

DKL

Original Poster:

4,862 posts

245 months

Friday 24th September 2010
quotequote all
How many will it have?
Its all very well getting a cheap lift bu if its going to cost a fortune to get it running I'd rather look at one of the single phase "home use" 4 posters.

netherfield

3,060 posts

207 months

Friday 24th September 2010
quotequote all
Depends, if it's hydraulic then one,if it's a screw type then up to four.

jeff m

4,066 posts

281 months

Friday 24th September 2010
quotequote all
Some electric motors can be wired to operate on a single phase.
It involves taking off the plate rewiring and either the puttin or taking out of a link.
The pump on my swimming pool has this option.
Whether your motor has this option I obviously don't know.

Don't try it if you are not sure.

Why not just do a search for a single phase motor with the same HP and shaft diameter.

thinfourth2

32,414 posts

227 months

Friday 24th September 2010
quotequote all
Talk to this guy

http://www.drivesdirect.co.uk/

What he don't know about phase converters ain't worth knowing

DKL

Original Poster:

4,862 posts

245 months

Thursday 30th September 2010
quotequote all
Invertors seem to be rated in hp for some reason and the motors at around 2.5kw. So that would suggest a 3.5 hp invertor.
Most of what I have read suggests an invertor that runs double the output you require so around 7hp.
At that level they are getting expensive - enough to make it not viable to buy an old ramp at a few hundred (plus replacing bits, delivery etc etc) against a purpose built single phase one at a little over 1000.
Or am I missing something?

Simpo Two

91,319 posts

288 months

Thursday 30th September 2010
quotequote all
freecar said:
Best bet, washing machine motor, some bodgery/general machining ét voila a single phase lift!
But get it wrong and you'll wake up in the Jurassic period...

neilsfishing

3,502 posts

221 months

Friday 1st October 2010
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A 1.5 Kw inverter will cost you £200ish Omron are offering a deal for the new ones at £160.00 for 1.5Kw

freecar

4,249 posts

210 months

Friday 1st October 2010
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
freecar said:
Best bet, washing machine motor, some bodgery/general machining ét voila a single phase lift!
But get it wrong and you'll wake up in the Jurassic period...
Feel free to whoosh parrot me but huh?