The E020 motor affectionately known at the Cricket-ball motor |
We have a motley collection of motors, all sorts from sideplates to modern geared motors and just about everything else between. I would not profess to have all the minor variations but we are not collecting them, we build with them, or at least that is the idea.
I have always thought of the Meccano motor as being either under powered, noisy or both. For these reasons all our recent, powered models, have utilised modern motors that are much more efficient and advantageously tend to be much smaller. This week we bought a modest collection of Meccano and amongst it were a couple of 20V motors. One is a spherical 'cricket-ball' motor and the other is a 20V long sideplate motor. Having never owned a cricket-ball motor before I thought I would give it a test and see if ran. After a bit of maintenance, and some oil in the correct places, it ran very well. This combined with the fact that I found the original pulley, in the box of Meccano that came with it, has made me reconsider using it in a model. looking for ideas I scanned through our collection of manuals and could find nothing, but the robot in the 1947, No.7-8 manual, model number 8.14. The only other reference can find to it (at the time of writing) is in the Gears manuals - both A and B. The relevant extract is reproduced below.
That is one way of making it useful... |
Rather tatty but a good runner |
Ralph.
I have a 20v side plate motor, will it accept a 15v armature ? Decent. 20v controllers are hard to come by
ReplyDeleteI have a 1963 (it’s written on the bottom of the box) so I assume that is the year. On the box top side edge are these #11200.
DeleteIt’s non reversing. The model is E020, there is a pulley on the drive side. There is no manual and I am wondering how do you power it up properly.
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ReplyDelete