Making an AC drill motor run faster

Thread Starter

cmartinez

Joined Jan 17, 2007
8,789
They are series connected motors, so the armature current also runs through the field.
Yes, this is one type of motor that I'm quite familiar with. When I was a kid, I wondered how come those motors didn't reverse their direction when I rotated their plug 180° and reconnected it.... and then it downed on me, how come they can work on AC at all? ... so I drew a nice diagram on a piece of paper, and stared at it for a while until I finally "saw it" turning in my head... years after that I learned Tesla's history and his invention of the first AC induction motor, and became amazed and astonished at his genius.
 

MaxHeadRoom

Joined Jul 18, 2013
30,699
I may have posted this before, but some decades ago a washing M/C manuf. used a Universal motor to operate it, for this, Motorola came up with specific IC geared to this, the TDA1085a.
This was a Triac based controller using a low resolution opto pick up wheel for speed monitoring and control.
The machines usually have a bridge after the Triac and a series inductor/choke.
The motor and controller came on the surplus market for a while after falling in popularity, I used them in controlling some home based power tools, particularly nice on a band saw.
Max.
 

Audioguru

Joined Dec 20, 2007
11,248
I put a high voltage few uF film capacitor in series with a 240VAC little fan and it made a series resonant circuit which boosted the 120VAC voltage to the fan. But for a heavy duty drill you would need a truckload of paralleled capacitors.
 
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