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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
  • Thursday lunchtime I was driving towards home up the M5 and being a man of a certain age thought sod it I've done enough for today.

    So I pulled off the motorway and went to the National Trust property Tyntesfield, had a coffee and a Danish pastry then walked around the house and grounds.

    It is claimed that it was the second house in the UK to have electricity according to the guides, however stood in the billiards room are just what you guys need for your workshops,  treadle operated lathes built for gentlemen to use for wood turning, no electricity required. 

Reply
  • Thursday lunchtime I was driving towards home up the M5 and being a man of a certain age thought sod it I've done enough for today.

    So I pulled off the motorway and went to the National Trust property Tyntesfield, had a coffee and a Danish pastry then walked around the house and grounds.

    It is claimed that it was the second house in the UK to have electricity according to the guides, however stood in the billiards room are just what you guys need for your workshops,  treadle operated lathes built for gentlemen to use for wood turning, no electricity required. 

Children
  • looks like it could be a drummond round bed, or if not a very similar style from  that Edwardian Hobbyist era. Still worth a few bob on Ebay  but only top dollar if in really good nick. 
    Some home engineer electric motor mods of a motor on the treadle plate turn the large wheel and pitman arm into a rotating automatic knee skinner and need treating with great caution. The commercial version had the flat belt for use with constantly tuning overhead line shafting to allow running in machine shops equipped with an external stationary engine. (and then either belt skid or a proper clutch  operated by something looking rather like a toilet pull)

    Mine is the slightly more robust flat bed 'B' type, originally dual drive options either treadle or overhead line. 

    M.

  • Sounds like the torque was delivered much the same as the old (King) cotton Mills around my patch, Flat belts constantly turning wheels and the magical way those tacklers would get the belt on a wheel whilst everything was still turning. Not H & S like these days but they had it down to a fine art . Those cotton mills were noisy, hence Les Dawson & Roy Barrowclough playing Aidy and Cissy lip-reading like their Mothers and aunties. Those were the days!