Posted September 23, 20213 yr This part is already faulty. The hub could not detect it. Lego has replaced with a new one. Thanks. But I am curious. What has happened inside the motor. Can it be repaired by a non electronic man? So, let's open it up. There is no screw or any opening... Then I need to be a little bit tough on this. I used a knife and Philip screw driver. So, that's it. Well, if you think this 13 minute video is boring, please forgive me. Thanks for watching.
September 23, 20213 yr 58 minutes ago, zumaidi said: Can it be repaired by a non electronic man? You mean a non-robot? Edited September 23, 20213 yr by Maaboo35
September 23, 20213 yr Hello, At Time-Stamp 2:24 you can see the correct alignment of the PCB-Assembly to Cable- & Motor- Connections The pictures from Time-Stamp 12:10 to 12:57 has the assembled PCB put 180° rotated on the Motor @zumaidi Is the PCB on the other side "empty" ? I think, that on the PCB-Part cliped on the white Housing with the red Cross-Axle Bush there will be placed the HALL-Sensor Does you conform ? Jo
September 23, 20213 yr Internally it seems almost identical to the PF L motor with an additional PCB for the position Hall sensor and ferrite magnet.
September 23, 20213 yr That looks way harder to get apart than the PF one! I've been worried that I'll have to rip mine apart for repairs someday, but your video doesn't make me very hopeful of getting it back together again!
September 23, 20213 yr Author 6 hours ago, Maaboo35 said: You mean a non-robot? No. I mean people without electronic knowledge. That refers to me. I don't have any such knowledge nor qualification.
September 24, 20213 yr Author 8 hours ago, BrickTronic said: Hello, At Time-Stamp 2:24 you can see the correct alignment of the PCB-Assembly to Cable- & Motor- Connections The pictures from Time-Stamp 12:10 to 12:57 has the assembled PCB put 180° rotated on the Motor @zumaidi Is the PCB on the other side "empty" ? I think, that on the PCB-Part cliped on the white Housing with the red Cross-Axle Bush there will be placed the HALL-Sensor Does you conform ? Jo At time -stamp 5:50, I have to cut the PCB in order to inspect the top part. from 12:10 to 12:57, I just re-arranged the parts to take photos. Is the PCB on the other side "empty" ? - you can see the back at time-stamp 5:50 the hall sensor ?
September 24, 20213 yr 9 hours ago, zumaidi said: No. I mean people without electronic knowledge. That refers to me. I don't have any such knowledge nor qualification. I was joking.
September 25, 20213 yr Author 18 hours ago, Maaboo35 said: I was joking. Ha ha ha. Sorry I didn't get it in the 1st place. Thanks. On 9/24/2021 at 4:19 AM, 2GodBDGlory said: That looks way harder to get apart than the PF one! I've been worried that I'll have to rip mine apart for repairs someday, but your video doesn't make me very hopeful of getting it back together again! The build is very tough and compact. Not sure which part is repairable. I guess may be the chip can be replaces but that requires special tool. In my case, it was not detectable by the hub.
September 25, 20213 yr THanks for opening your motor, so we can see how it looks like. I have never had a faulty motor, but good to know it can be openeed.
September 25, 20213 yr Author 1 hour ago, MurlosTehnik said: THanks for opening your motor, so we can see how it looks like. I have never had a faulty motor, but good to know it can be openeed. You are welcome. I am glad that the faulty motor can still give some value of knowledge.
September 30, 20213 yr I've had 2 motors fail recently, an XL and L. The XL motor was used a lot daily for testing for some 3 months. The XL started to turn slower and I could feel reistance when spinning it by hand. I took it apart, including the electrical motor itself and discovered that one of the brushes (they are not usual graphite burshes, but metal ones) managed to get bent backwards causing some kind of a short on the winding. The L motor was used in the steering from 42099 for a year or so, only for testing and that's very low usage, maybe once per week. The L motor is showing symptoms of reduced power, it doesn't reach as high currents when loaded/stalled as other ones, it feels like either the winding is damaged or that the internal protection is broken and triggers way too soon. I've never experienced such problems with Power Functions motors, so I'm a bit worried about their robustness.
September 30, 20213 yr On 9/23/2021 at 10:52 AM, zumaidi said: This part is already faulty. The hub could not detect it. Lego has replaced with a new one. Thanks. But I am curious. What has happened inside the motor. Can it be repaired by a non electronic man? So, let's open it up. There is no screw or any opening... Then I need to be a little bit tough on this. I used a knife and Philip screw driver. So, that's it. Well, if you think this 13 minute video is boring, please forgive me. Thanks for watching. Cool! Thanks for breaking that down for us! It's very helpful! On 9/25/2021 at 8:23 AM, MurlosTehnik said: THanks for opening your motor, so we can see how it looks like. I have never had a faulty motor, but good to know it can be openeed. I am surprised that TLG is once again using planetary gear reduction in their motors. I hope that they are not planning to continue doing this in the future. Edited September 30, 20213 yr by HydroWorld Outlook
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.