Harrison wiring

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Harrison wiring

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  • #410831
    Phil Lambley
    Participant
      @phillambley96816

      Hi guys I’m new here and looking for some wiring info for a Harrison 300 3 phase machine

      I’ve recently bought this and the guy showed my a video of it working before it was in wired from his supply

      I’ve now got it back to my workshop were I have 3 phase and wired it in as I think it should be but won’t work , the dro and lubrication pump is working but the motor won’t engage using the levered etc ,

      the only way I can get the motor to spin up is by pressing the contractors in with a screwdriver , the rocker switches on the end of the lever all seem to be working etc, when I wired this in in the isolated box ther was a red /blue /yellow cable and an earth fastened to the side of the box so I’ve wired the 3 colour to L1/L2/L3 and earth to the terminal , ther doesn’t seem to be anywer for the neutral to go ? Also ther is a small blue wire run in to the box that’s not connected as I’m. It shire what to put it too but it runs into the machine to what looks to be a 415-110 transformer

      any help really appreciated guys

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      #26633
      Phil Lambley
      Participant
        @phillambley96816

        Need help with wiring my new Harrison in

        #410842
        Martin Connelly
        Participant
          @martinconnelly55370

          A couple of things need to be known to help with answers.

          Are there any covers or safety screens with switches that need to be in the safe position to enable operation?

          Was it supplied by 3 phase mains at 415 line volts or a VFD at 240 line volts and what are you supplying to it?

          Martin C

          #410844
          Anonymous

            Many industrial machine tools do not use, or need, neutral. In theory a three phase motor running in star has no net current flow to or from the star point. So there's no point in providing a neutral. If a 230V rail is needed internally it comes from a transformer connected across two phases.

            I don't have a lubrication pump on my M300? The coolant pump runs separately from the main motor, controlled by a push button panel on the headstock end.

            I'd double check the mechanical linkage from the saddle lever to the electrical box. I've had issues with mine; the levers might move, but any slack means they don't move enough to operate the contactors.

            Andrew

            #410845
            Gray62
            Participant
              @gray62

              Here's a wiring diagram for the M300.

              That transformer is most likely the one that sits in the contactor coil/interlock circuit. But, there is also another transofrmer in the diagram for the machine lamp. You need to identify these and ensure they are correctly connected. as per the diagram below if you are running the machine from a 415 3 phase supply.

              m300 schematic.jpg

              #410846
              Phil Lambley
              Participant
                @phillambley96816
                Posted by Andrew Johnston on 25/05/2019 07:43:23:

                Many industrial machine tools do not use, or need, neutral. In theory a three phase motor running in star has no net current flow to or from the star point. So there's no point in providing a neutral. If a 230V rail is needed internally it comes from a transformer connected across two phases.

                I don't have a lubrication pump on my M300? The coolant pump runs separately from the main motor, controlled by a push button panel on the headstock end.

                I'd double check the mechanical linkage from the saddle lever to the electrical box. I've had issues with mine; the levers might move, but any slack means they don't move enough to operate the contactors.

                Andrew

                sorry my bad I meant the coolant pump not lubrication

                i know thers no issues with the supply as it runs all my other stuff fine ,

                the lever on the machine is working fine when engaged it pushes the switches as it should I’ve checked all emergency switches etc

                ahould ther be power to one side of the switches that the lever engages on as thers nothing ther

                but like I say if I push the contactor with a screw driver it spins

                thanks phil

                #410849
                AdrianR
                Participant
                  @adrianr18614

                  I had a quick google, it looks like some Harrison 300 lathe uses a 110V transformer to power all the switch gear. If so not connecting the transformer means it will never run.

                  **LINK**

                  If this is the same lathe as yours, the transformer should be connected to terminal block Z1 terminals 4 and 5.

                  The question will be why is the blue wire loose? has the wiring been bodged or was it just accidentally pulled out when the mains cable was removed.

                  Dont worry about the neutral. With 3 phase there are two ways to use it called star and delta. This link has a reasonable explanation **LINK**

                  #410850
                  AdrianR
                  Participant
                    @adrianr18614

                    Ha, great minds, Gray found the same diagram while I was typing my reply

                    #410858
                    Anonymous
                      Posted by Phil Lambley on 25/05/2019 07:51:56:
                      ahould ther be power to one side of the switches that the lever engages on as thers nothing ther

                      The microswitches operated by the saddle lever should have 110VAC on one side.

                      Is the emergency stop button on the headstock end enabled? It should be push to stop and then twist to unlock.

                      Andrew

                      #488561
                      Alwyn Mckeown
                      Participant
                        @alwynmckeown67105

                        Sorry to bring up an old post but I’m having the same problems did you manage to solve it in the end?

                        #488656
                        Phil Whitley
                        Participant
                          @philwhitley94135

                          Alwyn, this type of problem is often caused by mechanical shock during transit which has caused the switch in the starter/contactor overloads to jump out, power off, and try to find the reset button in the starter. Hope this helps

                          Phil.

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