There’s nothing wrong with the 3 motors on it the only thing that is wrong is I haven’t 3 phase and I’ve bolted the lift down in my workshop because I was told I could use a rottory converter on it but the one I have wouldn’t work. It was under powered …
Ah ha, that’s the real problem! Don’t give up yet because re-motoring the lift with single-phase isn’t the only way of getting it to work. For the reasons given substituting single-phase motors isn’t straightforward, hence check out all the options. They include:
- have the supplier install a 3-phase supply (Always works, usually difficult to obtain unless the premises are commercial)
- static converter (Plug and play, cheap, cheerful and may not work)
- rotary converter (Plug and play. large, noisy, but mostly reliable)
- electronic converter (cheap, small, quiet, but the inexpensive versions are reliable with one motor only, and the lift has 3, Not plug and play for this job unless an expensive converter is bought. Though prices are dropping, still at least £500.)
- 3-phase generator (Plug and play, large, noisy, expensive , but mostly reliable) glynboy has a generator!
All these 3-phase power sources have to be man enough, and it sounds as if the existing rotary converter isn’t big enough. Cure, replace with a bigger one. But I’m guessing, which is never good in engineering! How much power does the lift need? It will be in the manual, probably on a label somewhere, and if all else fails, we can add up the motor plates. Also possible the supply needs attention; a long extension cable from house to garage will drop a lot of volts.
In terms of power, I’d be amazed if a 30HP Lister can’t run a car-lift. 30HP is nearly 23kW, or 100A at 230V (my home has a 100A company fuse). A start/stop load might stuff the generator up, but I think it unlikely. Main disadvantage of Lister is noise, space, fumes, maintenance and having to keep the generator running when it’s only needed during lifts.
Not unusual for members to ask about their solution rather than explain the actual problem. Unfortunately not explaining risks getting bad or incomplete answers from the forum. I recommend explaining the objective because doing so opens the door to alternatives.
Beware decisions based on assumptions like ‘its a bloody good made lift not like those cheap crap you get from China’ Don’t shoot self in foot! The old lift has failed to do the job and getting it to work is causing lots of grief. Being solidly made has no value unless it works and will be worked hard for years. In contrast, an affordable new Chinese lift will work out-of-the box and they’re ‘good enough’ for most purposes…
Dave