Dillon wants $140 to "upgrade" it to current CV750 .
Anybody here replaced the little motor on one of 'em and got a good source ?
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Dillon wants $140 to "upgrade" it to current CV750 .
Anybody here replaced the little motor on one of 'em and got a good source ?
Watching. I have a Dillon Tumbler where their No BS Guarantee wasn't quite No BS
It's probably a 'off the shelf' motor.
If it has some model numbers or specs. on it, it shouldn't be a problem to find one.
I've gotten AC motors off Amazon and was surprised at how many different motors are listed there.
Idk but would like to source a new motor for the old FL-2000 tumbler. Anybody know about that one?
Post #12 of this thread may have your answer:
https://castboolits.gunloads.com/sho...500-motor-died
The motor from Grainger is 141 dollars. Get the 750.
https://www.grainger.com/product/DAY...Enclosed-4M090
I have used my CV500 for 30 years, so when it goes I will pay the 140.
Everything at Grainger is overpriced, but sometimes you don't have a choice..
True, but I just posted what was in the old post, the 120 VA is about the same plus shipping.
The post above is true everything at Grainger's is expensive, I have one of their store's down the road from me, nice place to go look around in.
Do they have Electricity in NW Arkansas? :)
140.00 for a new 750 is a good deal especially if there is free shipping, that was also in the other post from Dillion.
Dillon will not sell me the 750 motor - guess I'm not supposed to be smart enough to install !
It's out now so I can read the tag, round Emerson 1/25th HP at 3000rpm . The mounts must be specific for Dillon, right angle tabs tacked on . Found another brand on line close enough for 40 bucks delivered, will need to mount to the Dillon plate in a different manner but expect it will work with some redneck engineering. Too cheap to spend $140 for a fix or $230 for new. Guess I got 20 years out of it. If I was smarter, could probably take it apart and look for bushings - guessing that eccentric weight is hard on 'em .
Still curious if there is an actual bolt in replacement anywhere !
For little motors if you can get the tabs to the body a hose clamp or 2 will mount them.
If you have the specs tag then Mc Master Carr, Graingers can match them. US motors or other online vendor can also.
When looking the spec tab should have voltage HP motor mount you need these to match the motors.
I have yet to see anyone who has successfully fixed one with an off the shelf motor. The original motor in mine was made by a company that is out of business.
The 4M080 is too thick and the original mounts are too small to fit on it. My original motor is about 15/16” thick.
I don't know if the number listed in post 12 is the same motor I used but, My Grainger motor got installed months ago but just ran my first load today. And it works great. It took some doing to adapt it to work in the same space as the old one but it wasn't too bad. Let me look and see if that Grainger number is what I used. 1/40 th hp, 3000RPM, 115volt. I think I had to use the outboard mounted bearing mount from the old motor to get it to mount up and use longer screws. But this is way more HP and a bigger heavier motor than it came with. The original was impossible to find. Mine is running as we speak, when I first plugged it in, it made no noise and i thought it was the wrong motor but the addition of brass and its back to its noisy self.
Send me a cell phone number and I will send you pictures.
Well patting myself on the back was premature. My new Grainger motor seems to have died on the first batch. These are fart fan motors so I don't know if the motor was over worked or a wire came loose and I am in the middle of a painting the house and it will have to wait. I will look at the thing tonight and see if it is obvious. I have no idea if the duty cycle of theses C frame motors is compatible with the abuse they get from tumbling brass. I bought a motor that exceeded all the info I could find on the net about the Dillon motor, that doesn't mean that any of that info was right. If It just looks like the motor failed from over work, I guess I will send it to Dillon and spend $130. Because I love my Dillon tumbler. When I bought it 15 years ago I looked at that little motor and said to myself, this is the week link to this thing. I wish they had given out a little more info on why they changed motor style and where to find an original motor.
Motor manufacturers do not keep supplying a motor forever. We change motors when either the manufacturer goes out of business, discontinues that specific motor, or moves the manufacture to a country with proven poor quality control. The current motor is made in Japan, and is a sealed motor. It runs hot to the touch, but the motor engineers worked with us during testing to create a very durable motor. The current motor has a five year warranty, unlike any other motors we've used.
Our liability attorneys insist on us installing replacement motors. It's not a reflection on the IQ of our customers, it's an acknowledgement that other case tumbler manufacturers have been sued when houses caught on fire do to an incorrectly owner installed motor. Just the way it is.
Can you post the procedure for shipping the tumbler back, the cost and timeline required?