129 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
129 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3707
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Title: HPR3707: Recovering a Massive 3.5 HP Electric Motor from a Treadmill
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3707/hpr3707.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 04:25:35
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3707 for Tuesday the 18th of October 2022.
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Today's show is entitled, Recovering a Mass of 3.5 HP Electric Motor from a Treadmill.
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It is hosted by mechatronia and is about 17 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is, Retrieval of Future Robot Parts in the Field.
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Alright, mechatronia, I go in the field here.
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And there's a dump out here, which is not a dump, but people have been dumping all kinds
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of wood and scraps, stoves and weird shit, even though there's a transfer station further
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down the road.
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But there's a bunch of stuff here, so what I noticed is a treadmill.
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So I'm currently taking this apart and taking the first screws off and this is the bottom
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shoot, there it goes, bottom part of it, and some nails piercing my shoes because some
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idiots tossed wood on top of this stuff, at least if you're going to put scrap out
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in the middle of the dirt road, you may as well put it all in one place and sort it
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somewhat, you know, don't put wood on top of the electronics, but anyway, I'm glad
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it's here in the landfill because I've got one, I do have one big motor from a treadmill
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that I took apart before, it's about half the size of this one, this one is just massive.
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So the treadmill is called an epic and it has a display as well, so I'm going to take
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that out as well, right now, so yeah, this motor, like I had a motor before, this motor
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is like twice the size of the last one, and it's got a belt driven assembly here that
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turns this big roller thing for inertia, I guess, and that turns your treadmill.
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So it's got some electronics to drive it, and I'll be able to make use of it, but take
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that off anyway, because I use DC, but this thing probably plugs it, it'll definitely
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plugs into the wall, no doubt, 130 volts DC, how many 18, 650s, cells do I need, 162 by
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3.7, more than 40, so, I don't know if I should keep this assembly, the whole assembly,
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just take the motor, probably just take the motor and the display, this second figure
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out how to incorporate this roller, attach wheels to it or something, but probably will
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just get you the motor, man, this thing is massive, holy, can make a scooter or something,
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it's even too big to use for bicycle, man, it's just so wide, it's like over a foot long,
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and about 5 inch diameter, what a beast, well a beast, so yeah, get out there, start diving
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stuff like this, this stuff is so, like I can't believe scavengers aren't on this, but
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I guess there's no, there's no market in the old motors, let the scat, the copper scavengers
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happen, probably a lot of copper in this thing, yeah, make sure you watch Dave Jones guy,
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Ozzie's always jumping into dumpsters and stuff, it's pretty inspirational, I did update
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the mobile computer battle station, I found some xboxes and used a bunch of connectors and
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actually the plug-in cable itself, so I've got a actual plug-in, where I can plug-in,
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into the box that I will be a battle station, which consists of a battery pack, it consists
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of a battery pack, a buck converter and a boost converter, and it charges my computer
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about two times over, I've got five parallel four series, but yeah, this is going to
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be fun playing with this motor here, well I probably won't be playing with it too much,
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and we'll probably just start until I find another, like this, and then I can make something
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useful out of it, because it'll have two motors, but it might be smart to keep the housing
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that's in, it's just massive though, and I don't really have any place to put it, hmm,
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I'll have to think about that, it's got a very stack cap, Verista cap, 10 nano-fared
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250 volt AC, I don't know what that is, probably has something to do with converting the
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AC to DC, for this crazy thing, I don't even see any screws on this thing, oh jeez,
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I already stepped on nail up here, shoot, not into my foot, hmm, I can't even see how
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to do it, oh there's the mount, okay, okay, it's just going to be a couple of screws
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sockets, about 12mm looks like, I just replaced my alternator, I can sort of identify sizes
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on site, alright HPR and I'm going to go, so I hope this inspires you to get out there
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and see what's out there, you two can have massive motors that one day, if you're diligent,
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you know, you'll have enough for a robot or two, a big robot, I've made small robots so far
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with the printer technology, 3.5 horsepower continues to, holy, three horses in this thing,
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horses are powerful, crazy, alright, see you next time, alright, back at the lair, so
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thought I'd do a wrap up on what I got, put some pictures up, so hopefully your podcast app
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can do pictures or go check it out at hackerpublicradio.what is it org, whatever, so let's look at figure four,
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let's say my gets of everything there, so I got a few useful things, starting at sort of the top
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right there, there's a little wire end, a sensor that was pointed at the the attorney end of the
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roller that the belt driven thing turned, so it must be, I didn't see any dots or anything on it,
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like a normal wood with a sensor, maybe it's a heat sensor, I don't know, it's got riding on,
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I didn't look at it too closely yet though, so next down from top right, you see that big bar
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and stuff, I was gonna take that off but I didn't have another wrench to brace there, the wrench,
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the screw and the nut with, you need two wrenches for that kind of thing, there's a nut and a screw
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and it's pretty tight, but this is, we see a perpendicular to the big bar, to the right of it
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there, we see where that box with the wires coming out, plugs into it, that is a big screw, so this
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this is a motor, this is the incline motor for it, so got two motors out of it, and this thing's
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for sure got a lot of torque, it lifts something up and down, that's pretty heavy with this thing,
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so I think it's AC though, I'm not sure, but that's without very cap is part of too,
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the very cap, it's got all those wires sticking out of it, very cool, very interesting, so next we
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got the epic screen, it says epic on it, so there's a little display there, I'm not sure if I'm
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going to be able to get it working, it's got a circuit board bearing,
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there's plugged into that crazy control board up top and I snip most of the wires,
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we'll see, I didn't, I brought limited tools, and then continuing along crossing the
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center to at the bottom of the screen to slightly the left, you see a green and a black,
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black plugs, those are pretty nice audio plugs, actually they're pretty heavy duty,
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three nice leads from them each, pretty thick wires, so definitely reusable, heavy duty audio plugs,
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very nice to find, and I wasn't expecting it, but there's a rocker switch right in the bottom
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left there, a nice red rocker switch, which I'm going to incorporate into my mobile computer
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battle station, because I need another switch, so I can turn off the five volt supply, I'm just,
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I'm going to have the 19 volt on all the time through the boost converter, and I've got the
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buck converter as well, bringing it down to five volts, because I'm going to be running
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other stuff, plan to run orange pines stuff like that, so that's really cool,
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and it's red, it should actually be the master switch, but I think I'll be too lazy to
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switch it out with the other one that I've already got wired as the master, but maybe,
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and there we have the motor there, of course, and next to the motor on the left is the control for
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the motor, so there's, it looks like there's a couple of MOSFETs there, on the massive heat sink on
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the left, there's an IRF something or other, and there's also, there's a rectifier on that heat sink
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as well for the AC, so this board converts to AC, converts to DC, I mean, converts AC to DC,
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and runs that motor, but I don't know, hopefully there's something useful,
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I can get out of that board, because I, I use just DC for my power,
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figure five, I found that some irons there, it's actually a bed frame, and I was like,
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it looks like a frame for something, gears in the mind start turning, so,
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yeah, so figure six, I need to find another treadmill, of either of these two varieties,
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um, the bottom one, like they're both 130 volts, I see on the labels, so I guess that's a standard,
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the bottom one has an amperate, 17 amps, like that's insane, and the top one does not even have
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the amperating, but damn, it's gonna kick some ass, if I ever, then just to find another one,
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I'm sure I will eventually, but yeah, so that's some of the unexpected rewards of
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having people throw stuff out into the woods, so yeah, if you can, they should really have
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like a big room, like a big warehouse type room where people can take apart stuff that gets sent
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to those recycling centers, like sign a waiver or something, and just, you know, let people get
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use out of it, because there's a lot of working TVs, there's working computers, I mean, if there's
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too much competition, have a lottery or something for the good stuff, but don't throw that stuff away,
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man, don't recycle it into its component elements, and I'm not against that, well, I don't know,
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it uses a lot of energy, the, uh, there's a podcast, uh, I forget the name right now, it's uh,
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but they talk about the recycling, and I didn't like it very much, because that's so
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energy-intensive, and they're supposed to be, you know, grabbing this stuff, and I think it's
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just really wasteful, but the Lithium Ion episode is pretty interesting, oh yeah, a welcome diversion,
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it's called, so I don't really necessarily recommend the podcast, because I'm against throwing
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the kind of recycling in principle, but the Lithium Ion one, pretty interesting, uh,
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how he describes it, there's setting up these recovery facilities through Lithium Ion batteries,
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but, uh, yeah, I much prefer this way, so get out there, uh, bring tools in your car with you,
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when you're out and about, and always be prepared to jump when there's opportunity, I actually
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waited a little too long, like I saw this thing out there before, and then I waited until it was
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covered in wood, so that's, I'm from a bunch of wood today, I wouldn't have to do that if I acted
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sooner, but that's what I do. All right, later.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio, at Hacker Public Radio, does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself, if you ever thought of recording
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podcast, and click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Hosting for HBR has
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been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive, and our sings.net. On the
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Sadois stages, today's show is released on their creative commons, attribution, 4.0 international
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license.
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