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Stealth Engr -> RE: Can anyone help me with this issue? (4/1/2007 11:58:14 AM)
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Hi Borgrif, I'm new to this forum also, in fact I registered so that I could respond to your thread. I suspect that you have a poor or high resistance connection somewhere along the power path to the motor. Try to rig up a connection that will allow you to monitor the voltage at the motor with the motor connected. My guess is that with the load (motor) in the circuit, you won't see the power there when you operate the switch. Here's and analogy; If you had a garden hose connected to a sprayer with the faucet turned on, but there is a kink somewhere in the hose. You can hit the sprayer, but quickly the pressure drops, and you only get a slow dribble. What you are looking for is that "kink" somewhere in your power path. I would check and clean all connections. Any amout of corrosion will cause what you're seeing. If you have a good schematic for the circuit, this will make this task much easier. I wouldn't rule out the switch itself. You might try bypassing the switch using a jumper wire.
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