Well, I decided to try the last combination of washer orientation, and
it appears that was the ticket. Once I gently removed the macerator
housing, I could see how it's shaft mated with the washer that
contacted it, and it made a lot more sense. So the epoxied shaft and
greased other bits seems to be working well. I did a load of dishes
and not only did it not leak, but it ran more quietly than it has in a
while. I'm hoping for an easy return of the hamster-powered
replacement motor.
jim
On Feb 1, 2009, at 8:23 PM, Donald H Locker wrote:
> I think you'll have to do the experiment and let us all know.
>
> Donald.
>
> Jim Franklin wrote:
>> I JB Welded the plasitc sheath onto the motor shaft and that's when
>> I discovered the hairline crack running down the length of the
>> sheath. But it held well. However in the process of all that the 2
>> shouldered rubber grommet/washer things fell off and I can't figure
>> out how they go back on. Each orientation leaks. So I bought a new
>> motor from RepairClinic.com, because they had a page on the problem
>> and fix of my particular DW.
>> The old motor is 3 amps and about the size of an econobox starter.
>> What arrived is a generic, one size fits all motor that clips into
>> a sump that replaces my DW's sump. The motor is .65 amps and weighs
>> about 3 oz. It doesn't feel like there's any metal in it at all.
>> Should I even bother putting it in? I looks like it'd have trouble
>> powering a goldfish tank. Are looks deceiving, and a motor that
>> draws 1/6 the power can really do the job?
>> thanks,
>> jim_______________________________________________
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