Boman
08-24-2013, 08:48 AM
Have an older Kenmore direct drive washer 70 series. I noticed the motor gets very hot. I removed the motor and let it run with no load, and it still gets very hot, too hot to put your hand on it very long at all.
I tried another (used) motor with the same part number and got the same overheating on the machine or with no load beside the machine.
I called myself checking the tranny by attaching my drill to it and watching it agitate and spin. Does not seem to be a problem there.
I will pay closer attention tomorrow and see if the motor kicks in and out from the overheating, not sure I have seen it do that. It does seem like it takes it a little long to get up to speed in the spin cycle.
Will running these motors with no load cause them to overheat?
Will a bad capacitor cause a motor to overheat?
Will a bad centrifugal switch cause a motor to overheat?
I did put the drill on the motor itself, and the centrifugal switch sounded like it was kicking in mechanically.
When these motors get hot, they stay hot for a good little while. It almost seems like they get hotter before they cool off even when you turn them off.
I'm thinking part of the problem is two old worn out motors.
The machine seemed to do okay with the drill and coupler rig I have I use for that, but I do not know much at all about spin tubes, bearings, and such. About all I have to go by is noises if any.
I tried another (used) motor with the same part number and got the same overheating on the machine or with no load beside the machine.
I called myself checking the tranny by attaching my drill to it and watching it agitate and spin. Does not seem to be a problem there.
I will pay closer attention tomorrow and see if the motor kicks in and out from the overheating, not sure I have seen it do that. It does seem like it takes it a little long to get up to speed in the spin cycle.
Will running these motors with no load cause them to overheat?
Will a bad capacitor cause a motor to overheat?
Will a bad centrifugal switch cause a motor to overheat?
I did put the drill on the motor itself, and the centrifugal switch sounded like it was kicking in mechanically.
When these motors get hot, they stay hot for a good little while. It almost seems like they get hotter before they cool off even when you turn them off.
I'm thinking part of the problem is two old worn out motors.
The machine seemed to do okay with the drill and coupler rig I have I use for that, but I do not know much at all about spin tubes, bearings, and such. About all I have to go by is noises if any.