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  1. Hi. I have a LG refrigerator model 349R. It is in very good condition, the only problem is the condenser fan motor that gets noisy some time. I remove the part and spinned the axis. I heared some squeaking so the problem is the motor. I opened it and here are the pictures. Is there an alternative to replacing the entire motor : 1. Can the ball bearing be removed and replaced? 2. Is there a way to grease it (although I believe those bearing are not meant to be greased) 3. What is the purpose of the hole on the side. I found some sort of gum in it. Thx for your help
  2. Samurai Appliance Repair Man

    Dryer Motor Centrifugal Switch

    From the album: Dryer Repair

    Example shown is for a Whirlpool dryer. All dryer motors operate similarly. Some centrifugal switches are separately replaceable (like this one); some are not. For an electric dryer no-heat complaint where you've checked everything else and still not getting heat, that only leaves a bad centrifugal switch in the dryer motor. On most models, that means a new motor. Buy parts for your dryer with a 365-day return policy here ==> http://www.repairclinic.com/Dryer-Parts
  3. Any Miele experts out there? The drum in my T1415 dryer stopped tumbling. I've opened the dryer up and noticed the smaller v belt had snapped. I ordered a replacement through Miele but it got me thinking.... Since I wasn't able to get the right side panel all the way off (I could use help there too), I didn't really get a good look at the motor. Question, does the motor drive both the drum and the blower fan? Reason I ask is because the blower still works and I want to make sure the v belt just broke due to age vs the motor seizing up and snapping the belt. If motor drives the blower fan, then I only need to replace the belt vs belt plus motor. Apologies for the long winded description. Any insight would be helpful. Thanks in advance.
  4. Klixon® Compressor Overload Control Specifications View File Two engineering briefs from Sensata on their Klixon® line of compressor and motor overload controls. (Klixon® is the trade name for the overload protectors and is the most common one used in the industry.) The briefs cover the two most common types of overloads used with single phase compressors and motors: Phenolic 4TM series Submitter Samurai Appliance Repair Man Submitted 09/11/2017 Category Appliance Repair Manual Pot Luck Supper  
  5. Version 1.0.0

    118 downloads

    Two engineering briefs from Sensata on their Klixon® line of compressor and motor overload controls. (Klixon® is the trade name for the overload protectors and is the most common one used in the industry.) The briefs cover the two most common types of overloads used with single phase compressors and motors: Phenolic 4TM series
  6. Hi. I'm very much an amateur but the dryer is all taken apart now, so there's no going back!When Start is pressed, you hear a hum and drum doesn't turn, and the dryer doesn't go on. So I suspected the motor. At first I swear I saw a PF code briefly. Some people online say the thermistor can cause that error code although I'm not sure why that would be. When I went to diagnostic mode it said F01, which means control board apparently. I did the diagnostics per the tech sheet. The power to the motor on the control board was ok.The thermal fuse was ok.The thermistor had a reading of 16 ohms with a room temp of about 69, which according to the chart I saw means it's bad. It should be 10. It should be 16 at 60 degrees.Per the tech sheet I checked the resistance on the motor and I got a reading of 0 on all three tests: main winding, start winding, and belt switch. Tech sheet says the readings should be somewhere between 3.3-3.6 (main), 2.7-3.0 (start), and from infinity to a few ohms as the pulley arm closes the switch. But I get zero on all 3. Am I doing them wrong? Some sites say the motor should be zero.
  7. This all started with and E3 error code. I replaced the motor with a used motor. Same problem -- but before anybody starts in on me please consider that I live in a remote little village in the jungles of southern Costa Rica. All appliance repair is DIY and parts are nearly impossible to find -- and they cost 3 to 5 times as much as in the States. So with all of this as background let me tell you what I've seen, or rather heard, and maybe somebody on this forum can help me sort it out. The motor won't start which of course ends in an E3. The Hall sensor is evidently working just the way it is supposed to. The drum, while I can hear a wee bit of unpleasantness in the bearings, turns freely. When the motor is trying to start I hear a short chatter, like a chattering relay armature, for about 1 to 1.5 sec. This repeats another 4 times at 2 to 3 sec intervals before it codes out. If I take the belt off it starts every time however. At that time I also hear a very shortened burst of that same chatter begin just as the motor starts up. So I, being profoundly ignorant in these matters have consulted the all-knowing internet and have come to the conclusion that what I am hearing is the DC motor starter. If I understand it correctly, when a DC motor starts up we will see high current flow and low torque. To overcome that little problem requires a starter with some sort of mechanical device that successively switches out (i.e. removes) resistance as the motor begins turning. Now, to bolster this diagnosis I have also noted that the series of clicks that I referred to as "chatter" concludes in a clunk. This is consistent with descriptions I have found of 3 or 4-point starters where the "starter armature" is held in the run position until the motor is switched off, at which time the armature it is returned to the off position by a spring (ka-thunk). When the motor does run I also hear that same clunk just as the motor is switched off, just as I would expect. Finally my used replacement motor also trips the GFCI about 10% of the time just at the instant I would anticipate the "chatter" to start. A failed or failing starter would again seem consistent here. That is, the lack of back EMF results in very high current flow. So extrapolating further, all of this would seem consistent with a failed primary resistance (or primary, secondary and maybe even tertiary) resistance. In other words, the starter armature proceeds through the first couple clicks (remember I hear some shortened "chatter" begin before the motor actually starts -- when it does start that is) so the first current the motor sees would be with less resistance, thus allowing greater current (accounting for the GFCI tripping) but insufficient torque to get the motor moving when under even the slightest load. Now, both of my (well used) motors have the same problem or at least the same symptoms. This gives me pause. On the one hand I wonder -- is the starter such a common failure point that I would expect both old motors to have the same problem? On the other hand, if I was to start looking for failure points I would always start with the mechanical elements first. The question this leaves unanswered is why it would be intermittent. One would think, or at least I would surmise, that such a failure would be a hard failure. Then again, if everything has cooled down the motor just might be able to muster enough torque to get it started, if, if, if....... Finally, I know that "the dots" can always be connected in lots of different ways -- especially by the ignorant. This all seems so right though. CAN ANYBODY CONFIRM MY DIAGNOSIS, GIVE ME SOMETHING ELSE TO HANG MY HAT ON or at least add to the train of logic here before I start tearing into the guts of the motor (at least I have two to play with). I really hate beating my clothes on rocks at the river. Somebody help me please. AND, thank you for sticking it out far enough to read this. cheers, jerry
  8. GE WE17X10010 Dryer Motor Universal Wiring Connections Tech Help Doc View File Part instruction No PUB number Submitter Samurai Appliance Repair Man Submitted 07/14/2016 Category Appliance Repair Manual Pot Luck Supper  
  9. Version 1.0.0

    190 downloads

    Part instruction No PUB number
  10. Samurai Appliance Repair Man

    Delta BLDC Motor

    From the album: Puzzles

  11. Version Evernote enex ZIP

    27 downloads

    Important: The Ass'y DD motor is longer be available as of June 23, 2014 as a separate part. After June, 23rd, you will only be able to order the individual sub-components of the DD motor (Rotor, Stator, or Hall Sensor). See the illustration below. Refer to GSPN for the Rotor, Stator, or Hall Sensor part numbers for individual washer models. Evernote enex ZIP
  12. File Name: Repairing the DD Motor on Samsung FL Washing Machines File Submitter: Samurai Appliance Repair Man File Submitted: 16 Nov 2014 File Category: Appliance Repair Manual Pot Luck Supper Important: The Ass'y DD motor is longer be available as of June 23, 2014 as a separate part. After June, 23rd, you will only be able to order the individual sub-components of the DD motor (Rotor, Stator, or Hall Sensor). See the illustration below. Refer to GSPN for the Rotor, Stator, or Hall Sensor part numbers for individual washer models. Evernote enex ZIP Click here to download this file
  13. curjones

    1391221401795

    From the album: appliance pics parts

    Pain in the butt to get plastic cover off, tested out at 8 mf is the drive motor LEW005PQ dryer,
  14. curjones

    1391220738231

    From the album: appliance pics parts

    this is the drive belt motor and capacitor, thr blower motor also has a capacitor LEW005PQ dryer,
  15. From the album: Dryer Repair

    Buy the genuine OEM replacement motor here: http://www.repairclinic.com/PartDetail/Drive-Motor/279827/2584
  16. 35 downloads

    Basic Motor Function Test for Early Model Maytag Neptune Washers 16008373-01
  17. File Name: Basic Motor Function Test for Early Model Maytag Neptune Washers File Submitter: Samurai Appliance Repair Man File Submitted: 17 Jul 2013 File Category: Appliance Repair Manual Pot Luck Supper Basic Motor Function Test for Early Model Maytag Neptune Washers 16008373-01 Click here to download this file
  18. Samurai Appliance Repair Man

    Whirlpool Even Heat Dryer Motor And Heater Relay

    From the album: Dryer Repair

    These 24vdc relays are used on the Even Heat control boards in some Whirlpool dryer models and are interchangeable. Buy the replacement relay here: http://www.repairclinic.com/PartDetail/Relay/3405281/528722
  19. 155 downloads

    TESTING THE GWS WASH MOTOR Undercounter Dishwasher–Global Wash System Technical Service Pointer #: W10508910
  20. File Name: Whirlpool Dishwasher Service Pointer: TESTING THE GLOBAL WASH SYSTEM (GWS) WASH MOTOR File Submitter: Chat_in_FL File Submitted: 04 May 2013 File Category: Appliance Repair Manual Pot Luck Supper TESTING THE GWS WASH MOTOR Undercounter Dishwasher–Global Wash System Technical Service Pointer #: W10508910 Click here to download this file
  21. File Name: GE Hydrowave Washer Motor Replacement Chart File Submitter: Samurai Appliance Repair Man File Submitted: 11 Apr 2013 File Category: Appliance Repair Manual Pot Luck Supper HL 02-08 This bulletin is to provide clarification on the motor inverter assemblies for Hydro Wave washer models. Click here to download this file
  22. 67 downloads

    HL 02-08 This bulletin is to provide clarification on the motor inverter assemblies for Hydro Wave washer models.
  23. Samurai Appliance Repair Man

    GE Hydrowave Washer Inverter Motor Test

    From the album: Washer Repair

    Buy GE washer parts with a 365-day return policy here ==> http://www.repairclinic.com/GE-Washing-Machine-Parts
  24. Samurai Appliance Repair Man

    Whirlpool Dishwasher Wash Motor Failure Analysis, 1 of 5

    From the album: Whirlpool Dishwasher Sump Disassembly and Failure Analysis

    Photo courtesy of Grand Master appl.tech.29501, a.k.a., Jerry at Elite Appliance Service in Florence, SC. Visit his website ==> http://www.EliteApplianceService.org/ Buy parts for your Whirlpool dishwasher with a 365-day return policy here ==> http://www.repairclinic.com/Whirlpool-Dishwasher-Parts
  25. Samurai Appliance Repair Man

    Whirlpool Dishwasher Wash Motor Failure Analysis, 2 of 5

    From the album: Whirlpool Dishwasher Sump Disassembly and Failure Analysis

    Photo courtesy of Grand Master appl.tech.29501, a.k.a., Jerry at Elite Appliance Service in Florence, SC. Visit his website ==> http://www.EliteApplianceService.org/ Buy parts for your Whirlpool dishwasher with a 365-day return policy here ==> http://www.repairclinic.com/Whirlpool-Dishwasher-Parts
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