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Wiring advice for small single phase lathe in home workshop

I am being asked to wire up a small single phase lathe in a home workshop.

I will be using an NVR switch for start and stop, with a 0.55kw motor looks like I should have overload protection as well (552.1.2)

The customer has an old forward/reverse switch, my guess is 30 years old with metal case , but looks in good condition. My specific concern is that the switch has a leaver to rotate it and a center off position, it could easily be used to switch the motor off and then knocked on.The customer is quite safety conscious so fairly unlikely to happen, but I am wondering if this is normal or is there an alternative arrangement used? Just realised I my have to change the switch anyway as it's not ip rated, but still not sure what to use.

Tried to attach some pictures but cant work out how to do it? 

Parents
  • I really do think that this is being over-thought for a home workshop.

    I don't really see the reason for not having a plug and socket. I do on my Myford 254, which does have an emergency stop button, an interlinked chuck/chip guard, lead screw cover, and (with thanks to this forum) a brake on the motor. There is an isolator on the machine right where the supply enters, but if I am doing anything with the drive belt (interlocked cover too) I still unplug. I have 10 fingers and thumbs and want to keep them.

    If the lathe is wired to an NVR switch on the wall, it will still need a reversing switch. I am not sure what IP rating has to do with it.

    Perhaps the principle here is no ensure that the installation is no less safe than you found it.

  • Is the reversing switch that is shown above in the photo mechanical only  Chris? Is reversing achieved only through gears?

    Z.

Reply
  • Is the reversing switch that is shown above in the photo mechanical only  Chris? Is reversing achieved only through gears?

    Z.

Children
  • On many single phase machines that have a centrifugal switch to disconnect the starter winding once at speed, as it is the starter winding contacts that reverse  once running it does not reverse, so must pass through dead stop before restarting in the new direction.
    M.

  • IIRC, there are 4 conductors in the cable from the switch to the motor.

  • My Myford ML10 instructions show the 4 conductors from the Dewhurst Drum Type Reversing Switch going to the starting and running windings of a single phase motor (or for TP, 3 wires to the motor from a different combo of pins on the switch).

    PS - does anyone on this forum NOT own a lathe?

  • So the machine could run through a no Volt release type direct on line starter then?

    Z.

  • I don't own a lathe, but worked on lathes for most of the 90s.........in a school workshop and after school in an area that's never heard of health and safety. (Chuck key left in? Learn the hard way.........what guards? If anything got caught in the lathe, it'll rip something off, so don't do it. Sort of 3m or 4m long, ground to chest high type lathes mostly - so not HUGE - 3 and 4 jaw chucks. All manually operated except for some gears for long runs of turning down and screw threads, when we could engage a gear to cut the threads.) internal and external tapers, collars, and different types of metal, but usually mild steel. Maybe its a pre-requisite for ending up as an electrician? I did a bit in woodwork (O'Levels) metalwork (O' Levels), and plumbing type trades (DIY Really), became a farmer (and half *** mechanic) and eventually stuck with electrics.