Gregg wrote:A old friend called me up to winch out some of their fitzer bushes. I winched out two while they chainsawed the roots. On the last one the winch gave up.
Smittybilt xrc8 (8000lb). I swapped in a new solenoid for the easy fix but nothing changed. I pulled the winch from its hiding spot for access and tested the motor without the solenoid or switch and nothing. Figured it's the motor. My question is...can the motor be fixed? If so, by who? Im not really up for buying a new winch.
Cool.
Gregg wrote:I spoke too soon. I burned up the replacement brush in the same spot. It seems to get really hot fast and then slows way down. I've checked all the connections and they looked good.
However, right after I put the new brush assembly in and tested it, it was running fine so I put the old solenoid back in (because I thought it was only the motor) and the old solenoid got really hot and then the motor slowed way down. I put the new solenoid back in and it also got hot and the winch was super slow. Is it possible the old solenoid cooked the new brushes?
Digger wrote:Gregg wrote:I spoke too soon. I burned up the replacement brush in the same spot. It seems to get really hot fast and then slows way down. I've checked all the connections and they looked good.
However, right after I put the new brush assembly in and tested it, it was running fine so I put the old solenoid back in (because I thought it was only the motor) and the old solenoid got really hot and then the motor slowed way down. I put the new solenoid back in and it also got hot and the winch was super slow. Is it possible the old solenoid cooked the new brushes?
Unlikely. The brushes may be telling you a story. You may have an internal short on the rotor windings. It may have effectively lowered the resistance of the coil and is causing it to draw higher amperage and melt your brushes. If its series wound, same thing could happen to the field coils. I would pick up another set of brushes and run the motor again while monitoring amperage. If you don't have a DC amp clamp or shunt, you can swing by my place and we'll hook that thing up and test it.
Gregg wrote:Digger wrote:Gregg wrote:I spoke too soon. I burned up the replacement brush in the same spot. It seems to get really hot fast and then slows way down. I've checked all the connections and they looked good.
However, right after I put the new brush assembly in and tested it, it was running fine so I put the old solenoid back in (because I thought it was only the motor) and the old solenoid got really hot and then the motor slowed way down. I put the new solenoid back in and it also got hot and the winch was super slow. Is it possible the old solenoid cooked the new brushes?
Unlikely. The brushes may be telling you a story. You may have an internal short on the rotor windings. It may have effectively lowered the resistance of the coil and is causing it to draw higher amperage and melt your brushes. If its series wound, same thing could happen to the field coils. I would pick up another set of brushes and run the motor again while monitoring amperage. If you don't have a DC amp clamp or shunt, you can swing by my place and we'll hook that thing up and test it.
I did some continuity tests,
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VXV4p3m9TwY
and it passed all three. I don't know how to test the field coils.
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