Today was a big day. The company I work for (printing shop) decided to clear out the old stuff that's been piling up in the attic for 10 years now. While this is not a big company, the IT dept was constantly updated so the old stuff went up.
About 7 Macintosh 6500, 9500, AppleWriter/Epson/HP printers, 21"/17"/15" monitors, one Linotype RIP, one Linotype imagesetter, only good old stuff ... So I delved in, scrounging nearly 100Kg of power supplies, circuit boards, motors, transformers, and one HUGE motor that looked like gold to me.

It had eight wires out, and it was the biggest stepper motor I have seen so far.
Took it home and dismantled it a bit. To my dissapointment the actual motor is only 1/3rd of its size. The rest is just metal. Heavy as hell, about 10kg full metal. Some magic bearing inside that keeps spinning the massive flywheel for minutes.

This motor was used to spin this hexagonal mirror and reflect the laser beam that was writing the photo-sensitive film. I guess the giant flywheel was for constant rpm.

The bad part is that the shaft is part of the big thing, taking the motor apart leaved me without the shaft or bearings. I could order that to be custom made but only if you think it's worth the trouble.

Taking the lid apart I found one tacho disk and the ring magnets on a circular armature. The 6 coils are wired with thick wire (about 1mm) and I presume the 8 wires are the coil ends.


The question is - is this worth the trouble of making a custom shaft and bearings?
Another goodie was the laser unit. This is a class IIIa red laser tube powered from a He-Ne Laser power supply. Operating on 12VDC, it takes about 1 Amp to fire the tube.

I was thinking about using the power supply to light up a fluorescent tube. I wonder, is this wise? The 2700V output made me wonder.
The wide assortment stepper and PM motors will sure come in handy for small projects. Many of them have gear-down boxes. There were also two old floppy units that I took apart for those cute little steppers.

As for now, I'll go on scrounging the components off the circuit boards. This is fun indeed. Taking apart 1995-labeled power supplies is like opening a giftbox.
Claude