pbrosnan
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See QLDKev's comment above.Looks neat, though I'm wondering if 20nm is going to be enough to run a Mill Master?
cheers
grant
See QLDKev's comment above.Looks neat, though I'm wondering if 20nm is going to be enough to run a Mill Master?
cheers
grant
Try and jam a rock into rollers with the torque you say and I feel your nylon gear will fail. I think you need to fully test this product.I haven't pulled one down, but at a guess, for this torque I'd say the worm would be steel and the drive would be nylon. This is generally how these types of drives are made. When the torque goes up they switch to a copper drive wheel. But they usually use a soft material here to limit noise.
Try and jam a rock into rollers with the torque you say and I feel your nylon gear will fail. I think you need to fully test this product.
I appears to be a good deal and I hope it does hold up.
GB
Thanks to QLD Kev, I bought a similiar steup for my mm2, 24V bike motor from hong kong and spider coupling.Tested on the weekend by just connecting to my car battery, will add PSU next time. Ran through 5kg grain in no time. Actually got @ 4% increase in effeciency on this brew cf using drill, might be a one off, don't know. Same 0.8mm gap setting as usual. Torque wasn't an issue, plenty of grunt.
cheers
sean
By the way cost @ $100 for set up.
So its been tested at a sudden stop/jam ?Wrong. The motor stalls.
See QLDKev's comment above.
20Nm, that should run a decent sized mill. I'm running my MM2 on a 7.46Nm motor.
QldKev
Yes I saw that though I thought MM2 was the usual abbreviation for a Monster Mill with 2 rollers.
edit: And just checking qldkev's website, that's what he has. An MM2 is quite easily driven compared to a Mill Master, so I'm thinking it may need everybit of the 20nm on offer.
cheers
grant
Yep the MM2 was a reference to a Monster Mill 2 roller
Bit I think Grant's reference was more to the fact since my mm2 runs from a 7.46nm motor; so I think 20nm would run the larger Mill Master. But that is a *think* as I've never used a Mill Master.
Though all things considered, I really don't think I'm putting 20nm of force into the handle on the mill master so I've ordered one of the specials from motiondynamics and we'll see how it turns out :icon_cheers: (and yes that was deliberate ).
Any thoughts on the coupling? From the drawing, I wasn't even sure of the shaft size...
Well I took a punt and ordered the motor. It arrived yesterday as advertised, thumbs up for the fast service.
Eager to see if it has the grunt to drive the Mill Master I attempted a quick and dirty fit. Bored a hole in the drive spindle on the mill and coupled to the motor with a split pin hooked up the motor to a 12v battery charger, poured a couple of hundred grams of various grains plus some torriefied wheat into the hopper and flicked the switch.
It chugged manfully for a little while before jamming. I flicked the power off, gave the hopper a shake and switched back on. Again it chewed for a short while before jamming, this time shearing the split pin.
There's quite a bit of play in the couple I devised and the motor would move around a bit as the grain fed through. It ran fine when I slowly poured the grain into the hopper though so I will look at improving the alignment of the motor and drive spindle and sort out a less sloppy coupler and bolt the motor down firmly. I'm thinking the slop and movement is creating inefficiency. Also the battery charger is only 6amp so that may also be a factor.
Any ideas?
cheers
Grant
I would suggest that running a 6 Amp charger to power a motor which is stated to require 16 Amp is your issue.Well I took a punt and ordered the motor. It arrived yesterday as advertised, thumbs up for the fast service.
Eager to see if it has the grunt to drive the Mill Master I attempted a quick and dirty fit. Bored a hole in the drive spindle on the mill and coupled to the motor with a split pin hooked up the motor to a 12v battery charger, poured a couple of hundred grams of various grains plus some torriefied wheat into the hopper and flicked the switch.
It chugged manfully for a little while before jamming. I flicked the power off, gave the hopper a shake and switched back on. Again it chewed for a short while before jamming, this time shearing the split pin.
There's quite a bit of play in the couple I devised and the motor would move around a bit as the grain fed through. It ran fine when I slowly poured the grain into the hopper though so I will look at improving the alignment of the motor and drive spindle and sort out a less sloppy coupler and bolt the motor down firmly. I'm thinking the slop and movement is creating inefficiency. Also the battery charger is only 6amp so that may also be a factor.
Any ideas?
cheers
Grant
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