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Maintenance Detective: DC Brush Motor
You have a standard DC brush motor on a DC speed control driving a production conveyor. One day, the operator tells you, "The motor is running at full speed and I can't turn it down." What's the most likely single cause and how could it have been prevented? Drop your answer in the comments before scrolling. Answer: Brush dust buildup shorting the negative brush to ground. Carbon brush dust is conductive. As it accumulates on a brush grommet, it can create a short to ground.

Mac Davis
2 min read


Maintenance Detective: Articulated Conveyors
Suppose you look at weekly passdowns, and one of your plastic articulated conveyors has broken the chain multiple times in the last week. You have lots of these conveyors, but this one is breaking and getting repaired repeatedly. They're all about the same age. This one isn't all that different from the others. It does start and stop under load, but they all do. You go look at it and everything you can see while it's running seems fine. No jumping or bad mechanical components

Mac Davis
2 min read


Tech Time: When Your Thermal Overload Trips
A tripped thermal overload is one of those events that is an opportunity to avoid unnecessary downtime and repeat calls that not every shop understands. Some techs reset overloads over and over until something breaks. Wiser techs just take a couple extra minutes to find the problem and they touch it once. The difference is sequence and understanding. Here's an approach that starts where you already are and rules out causes efficiently. What could have caused it? Before you do

Mac Davis
9 min read
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