[GreenKeys] HELP ! my M15 carriage is stuck to the left!
Richard Knoppow
1oldlens1 at ix.netcom.com
Wed Jun 29 02:43:07 EDT 2016
I wonder if the lubrication system in the machine depends on the oil
wicking from a reservoir. If so perhaps after an extended time the oil
flows off the bearing surfaces and none replaces it. I don't know the
details of how the lubrication works. Oil has many properties and I have
found it difficult to find authoritative information about specific
applications.
On 6/28/2016 11:01 PM, Gil Smith wrote:
> I have never tried a synthetic oil; only use 30W non-detergent with no
> additives. But I don't know much about the chemistry of it all, just
> the recommendations of folks.
>
> The evaporation aspect is interesting. It is certainly something that
> will happen to our machines, unless they get periodic use (a great thing
> to do, but does not always happen that way). Lucas Red-And-Tacky grease
> -- also a good tip. Have to look for that.
>
> thx, gil
>
>
> gil smith, AF7EZ
> greenkeys moderator
> gil at baudot.net <mailto:gil at baudot.net>
>
>
> -------- Original Message --------
> Subject: Re: HELP ! my M15 carriage is stuck to the left!
> From: John Nagle <nagle at animats.com <mailto:nagle at animats.com>>
> Date: Tue, June 28, 2016 10:25 pm
> To: Gil Smith <gil at baudot.net <mailto:gil at baudot.net>>
>
> That's why I'm big on using synthetic motor oil, or at least
> something with no heavy fractions. If you let the oil evaporate,
> and it contains heavy fractions (the tar and asphalt components of
> petroleum) the light fractions evaporate first, leaving the machine
> gummed up.
>
> I've brought machines back from that. Weeks of work,
> including a main shaft disassembly and cleaning. Everything where
> there's a tight fitting bushing on a shaft had to be freed up.
>
> Synthetic oils have one molecular weight - no heavy fractions.
> So do some good machine oils, but synthetic motor oil is so cheap.
> When they evaporate, they just leave behind a dry machine, which
> is not a big deal. I've been using 0-20W synthetic motor oil
> and white lithium grease for the parts that need greasing. The
> motor pinion gets Lucas Red-And-Tacky grease, which resists being
> thrown off by centrifugal force. That's the only high speed
> gear that needs it.
>
> John Nagle
>
> On 06/28/2016 10:00 PM, Gil Smith wrote:
> > Hi John:
> >
> > Thanks for the troubleshooting tips.
> >
> > It looked clean and greased, and I turned it on and had it running for a
> > few minutes, and it seemed fine, then I turned it off to change the
> > ribbon and wipe it down a bit. I suspect that while I was wiping it
> > down, I touched whatever metal bit triggers the CR function, so when I
> > turned it back on the carriage zoomed to the left. This would not have
> > been too alarming except that the motor sounded like it was grinding as
> > well, and something started to smell. Turned it off right away.
> >
> > Next thing I did was to turn the motor fan by hand (yes, CCW) to test
> > the mechanism and it felt very tight (compared to how it felt normally,
> > such as when I tried the same thing just before turning it on for the
> > first time in ten years).
> >
> > When first rebuilding this unit, I had the carriage jump past the stop
> > (by tilting the unit on its left side without first moving the carriage
> > to the left), so this time I had horror flashbacks to that experience.
> > Back then, it not only jumped the stop but one of the selector bail
> > parts broke off at the end.
> >
> > Anyway, I had completely forgotten about the button on the left that
> > releases the carriage ("you do know how a button works, don't you?" --
> > Roy on IT Crowd) until George reminded me. Yes it released just fine
> > and was not past the stop.
> >
> > However, it was still very tight when I tried to turn it by hand.
> > George said to oil 'er up and that was indeed the problem. The main
> > shaft took a lot of oil. I filled the cups and such as well and it came
> > back to life with a normal sound after just a few seconds of running.
> >
> > So, it is a good lesson to not presume that a previously-oiled unit is
> > still properly lubricated after a decade of storage, even storage
> > inside. If it has been a while, lube it up before turning it on.
> >
> > Yeah, I should have known better.
> >
> > gil
> >
> >
> > gil smith, AF7EZ
> > greenkeys moderator
> > gil at baudot.net <mailto:gil at baudot.net> <mailto:gil at baudot.net>
> >
> >
> > -------- Original Message --------
> > Subject: Re: HELP ! my M15 carriage is stuck to the left!
> > From: John Nagle <nagle at animats.com <mailto:nagle at animats.com>
> ><mailto:nagle at animats.com>>
> > Date: Tue, June 28, 2016 2:41 pm
> > To: greenkeys at mailman.qth.net <mailto:greenkeys at mailman.qth.net>
> <mailto:greenkeys at mailman.qth.net>
> >
> > > From: "Gil Smith"<gil at baudot.net <mailto:gil at baudot.net> ><mailto:gil at baudot.net>>
> Subject: [GreenKeys] HELP !
> > my M15
> > > carriage is stuck to the left!
> >
> > > Turned on my M15 for the first time in a while, and it was running
> > > fine. The print was light so I shut it off to change the ribbon.
> > > Wiped it down a bit as well. Turned it back on and the carriage drove
> > > to the left. Does not seem like a normal CR. The dashpot is
> > > depressed fully, so I think it skipped over a stop. I can manually
> > > turn it but it is tight. I have fully been through this machine,
> > > though it has been many years. I believe I had this issue before,
> > > but unsure of the fix.
> >
> > Dashpot fully depressed is the normal left margin condition. The
> > left margin adjustment is the long screw on the carriage that
> > hits the dashpot lever. That's probably not the problem.
> >
> > - Unclear about "I can manually turn it but it is tight".
> >
> > - Can you move the carriage by hand? If you can, then
> > it's not stuck, the carriage advance mechanism didn't get
> > reset after a carriage return?
> >
> > - If you can't move the carriage by hand, will the carriage
> > unlock and move if you press the carriage release button on
> > the left side of the machine?
> >
> > - If the carriage will move, if you let it return, does it
> > lock into place as the carriage advance mechanism re-engages?
> >
> > John Nagle
> >
>
>
>
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--
Richard Knoppow
1oldlens1 at ix.netcom.com
WB6KBL
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