The 3 phase switch that was in it went out. Well it broke and was in pieces. I had a roller switch I wasn't using on an electric cord cut off of some device that used it at one point or another. I spliced that it on its cord and wired around the switch. Then, the rotor, for whatever reason, wasn't spinning in the stator. I ended up oiling it and the joints it connected to. I'm not sure if a person should lubricate the inside of the stator with oil or not. It worked in any case though.
I'm the F&I manager at a used car dealership. I'm a little of this, little of that, whatever. I handle financing, and do what not stuff for the boss. Since I'm a computer/network tech, I also fix his computer. I know some basic electrical stuff. Nothing too deep in detail, but able to do minor electrical work like replace receptacles, replace rocker/other types of switches, put in dimmer switches, etc. I resurrected a fan from the dead the other day.
I'm fixing to be an entrepreneur. Handy to be proficient in some mechanicing skills. I'm starting simple with like weed eaters, chain saws, mowers, and the like. Then I'll probably move up to motorcycles, cars, diesel trucks, and the like. Mechanicing is a lot of work, but the pay is good. In my area it's $25/hour(for cars), $6-8 for small engines, and not sure about motorcyle shops. Oil field work is pretty plentiful and profitable here as well.
Wow. I want to learn this stuff. That looks fun. I'd like to see someone as novice as me rip that whole bike apart and put it back together. LOL. I can take this stuff apart with little problems, but putting it back together is a challenge. I'm pretty new to this whole little mechanicing world. How big an air compressor you need to run them guns? I want to trade occupations. I've been into computer stuff, now I'm wanting to do something else.
Some people just don't need tools :D
Kachoo01 11 months ago
The 3 phase switch that was in it went out. Well it broke and was in pieces. I had a roller switch I wasn't using on an electric cord cut off of some device that used it at one point or another. I spliced that it on its cord and wired around the switch. Then, the rotor, for whatever reason, wasn't spinning in the stator. I ended up oiling it and the joints it connected to. I'm not sure if a person should lubricate the inside of the stator with oil or not. It worked in any case though.
heinj98 3 years ago
I'm the F&I manager at a used car dealership. I'm a little of this, little of that, whatever. I handle financing, and do what not stuff for the boss. Since I'm a computer/network tech, I also fix his computer. I know some basic electrical stuff. Nothing too deep in detail, but able to do minor electrical work like replace receptacles, replace rocker/other types of switches, put in dimmer switches, etc. I resurrected a fan from the dead the other day.
heinj98 3 years ago
I'm fixing to be an entrepreneur. Handy to be proficient in some mechanicing skills. I'm starting simple with like weed eaters, chain saws, mowers, and the like. Then I'll probably move up to motorcycles, cars, diesel trucks, and the like. Mechanicing is a lot of work, but the pay is good. In my area it's $25/hour(for cars), $6-8 for small engines, and not sure about motorcyle shops. Oil field work is pretty plentiful and profitable here as well.
heinj98 3 years ago
Wow. I want to learn this stuff. That looks fun. I'd like to see someone as novice as me rip that whole bike apart and put it back together. LOL. I can take this stuff apart with little problems, but putting it back together is a challenge. I'm pretty new to this whole little mechanicing world. How big an air compressor you need to run them guns? I want to trade occupations. I've been into computer stuff, now I'm wanting to do something else.
heinj98 3 years ago