Headlight Motor |
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Borteep
Member Joined: 16 July 2007 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 88 |
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Topic: Headlight Motor Posted: 26 September 2007 at 9:10pm |
I was pulling a stripped gear out of my motor ('86 GT), to drop in the R.D. gear, and I noticed some time since I'd last used the motor (have had it locked upright for over a month since the gear stripped out) I lost a brush on the, uhh, part with the carbon brushes on it in the motor.
Is there any reason I shouldn't just solder a new brush on, and if that is kosher, is there any particular way I should go about doing that? |
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Blair
Senior Member Joined: 12 February 2007 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 250 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 27 September 2007 at 6:33am |
I just did that to mine. It works well. Clean it , solder it , reinstall it. |
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beken
Admin Group Joined: 12 February 2007 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 1462 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 27 September 2007 at 1:27pm |
I just did that to mine. It works well. Clean it , solder it , reinstall it. [/QUOTE] I tried soldering new brushes on and couldn't get the solder to stick to the metal tabs that press the brushes againts the motor armature. Must be the type of metal they use or the type of solder I was using. I used aluminized glue and it worked pretty well but the brushes were not straight and would rub the motor armature at an angle. So I bought new brush assemblies from Rodney Dickmans. I just checked and unfortunately, the motor brush assemblies are no longer there. Maybe somebody else has the brush assemblies now.
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Beken (aka Ken) - bekentech@westcoastfieros.com Original and still the owner of an 85SE 2M6 4spd |
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Borteep
Member Joined: 16 July 2007 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 88 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 27 September 2007 at 2:46pm |
Looks like I'm going to have to try this. Where did you source a new brush? |
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Blair
Senior Member Joined: 12 February 2007 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 250 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 27 September 2007 at 7:52pm |
The brushes are soldered when new but time makes it week and fall of, in this case in my hand. I cleaned both parts to base material, tinned the arm ,and then reattached the old brush. I've also used brushes from scrap motors to repair good ones. The brush works best when installed straight.
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beken
Admin Group Joined: 12 February 2007 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 1462 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 28 September 2007 at 6:57pm |
My brushes were worn to bare metal....usually happens if your car is a daily driver for more than 20 years. I sourced some carbon brush material at Armature Electric in Vancouver. They specialize is building custom electric motors. They tried to do my brushes for me and failed so just gave me a bunch of brush material for free I don't think the brush material is very expensive at all.
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Beken (aka Ken) - bekentech@westcoastfieros.com Original and still the owner of an 85SE 2M6 4spd |
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Dr.Fiero
Senior Post God Joined: 12 February 2007 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 1726 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 28 September 2007 at 7:54pm |
If you find something that's close, but say the profile is wrong (where the curved part mates to the armature) - wrap some fine sand paper around the armature, grit side out.
Let the brush rest against the paper, then pull the strip of paper back and forth to shape the brush. |
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Borteep
Member Joined: 16 July 2007 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 88 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 03 October 2007 at 11:45pm |
Sweet. I might have some pooched alternators I can search for a brush, or if not SMI Electronics (here in Langley) probably has the material.
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