I ran my mini sawmill for the first time Aug 1, and have now cut a few boards from logs.
I'm pleased to report that the motor, converted from 3-phase to single as per my previous diary entries, seems to run very well under load. I can't tell if it actually has its original rated 7.5 HP or not, but it sure has way more oompf than my ~2 HP radial arm saw! Doing a 3 or 4 inch deep cut through a piece of relatively soft hardwood with a 12" blade I could push it along at a good speed and it didn't seem to take much notice of it. Today it cut a few 2"x2"s from an ornamental plum log with the 16" blade with no hesitation.
I ended up using a single 33uF run capacitor in the "start" winding. I'm using the starting technique someone suggested earlier which I pooh-poohed at the time: starting it spinning with a rope and then turning the power on. Ugh! It works... though just barely with the 16" blade, with about 15 feet of rope wound around the shaft, and a hard, steady pull, then a quick run back to the switch to flip it on.
I have stalled the motor twice. Once was when I had started it backwards by mistake and it probably wanted to stop anyway. It was actually cutting - but the blade was smoking, and I couldn't figure out why the carriage wanted to pull me along! Then once when a lever catch (that I knew was too weak and was about to replace, but a neighbor wanted to see it run) bent and the 16" blade jammed. Not before it flung the small log aside, cutting right across the end of it an inch or more deep, in a fraction of a second. Luckily, no injury or damage resulted.
The couple of the times when I was cutting and it was running a few minutes, I remembered to check the heat as it spun down. There wasn't any I could feel. The blade was cold when I checked shortly after stopping, too.
So, the motor runs great - the mill needs more work. (So much for it being my "June project". August, and it's still holding up my wave power generator "July project"! Hah! Don't have me do your job labor estimates!)
Cheers,
Craig