Opposite grinder rotation

calstar

Active User
H-M Supporter Gold Member
Joined
Sep 26, 2013
Messages
408
Recently picked up a grinder(Doer,1/2hp, 1725rpm, 120v) at a garage sale to use with wire wheels. Rotation is opposite to what is usually found, it rotates from the bottom up, not the top down. Here is a marginal photo(if needed i can take a better one), the only black/hot wires are a pair labeled T2 and T3, will switching these reverse rotation direction? I can use it as but have been standing on the back side or side so I get the top down rotation, would be nice to correct it.

IMG_4419.jpg
thanks, Brian
 
Hi Brian, yes you should be able to reverse it.
There should be two windings, and the cap goes to one of them. You'll need to
swap the ends of the winding that connects to the cap or swap the run winding ends.
First step: Get some masking tape and a sharpie and label all the wires; draw a diagram how it's connected now.
Then disconnect all the connections and locate the two windings with a ohmmeter or continuity checker
at that point you can wire it back up.
I'll do a little sketch and post it to make the wiring a bit clearer.
Mark
 
Last edited:
Does it make a clicking noise when it comes to a stop? In other words is there a centrifugal switch in there?
It's either a capacitor start motor or a capacitor run motor. Capacitor run motors don't click.
 
Here is a diagram which is most likely how your motor is wired now.
What you want to do is either swap A and B or C and D to reverse.
Locating A and B with a meter would be easiest, you'll get a steady low ohms reading.
When measuring C and D you'll get a funny reading that will start off low and go high (infinite ohms) because of the cap. (the centrifugal switch is normally closed when the motor is off)
mot55sa1fix.jpegMark
 
Last edited:
If that were a permanent split cap or PSC, also called a "capacitor run" motor, the centrifugal switch would be absent, the cap would
just connect to point C, but otherwise would be reversible the same way.
M
 
Is the pic showing up now? I can see it on this end. No wiring diagram on motor. It makes a click so there is a centrifugal switch. Thanks for the diagram Mark, I'll look for continuity. Yeah, I almost always label and photo when I'm working on things, ALWAYS when its electrical.

Brian
 
Be carful! It could it be that the grinder was dissembled at some point and put back together backwards. That is to say, the guards & base facing the wrong way. I recently restored a bench grinder and realized that was a possible error. You can determine if the motor rotation is correct by checking which way the shaft nuts are threaded, if the nuts will tighten by holding them and turning the shaft in the direction it is now rotating, the rotation is correct. If you reverse the motor the nuts would want to loosen, possibly creating a dangerous condition.
 
Good point Ed
Check that Brian, I hadn't thought of it, but I was wondering why it would be backwards in the first place
M
 
Last edited:
Back
Top