Albeit a somewhat crude drawing of it, here's what the swing-down feature on a pole mounted Hurricane-130 would look like:SouthDakotaBoy2009 wrote:swing down feature??? whats that?

(click picture for a larger picture)
I don't follow. The Thunderbolt's chopper motor is a two-horsepower, single phase motor.1. A one-horsepower motor with a small load, which runs on single-phase power (I'm not talking about the blower-motor Rolling Eyes ) is going to wind up very fast.
I'm not saying that all smaller motors will wind up very fast, but allot do.Jim Z wrote:I don't follow. The Thunderbolt's chopper motor is a two-horsepower, single phase motor.1. A one-horsepower motor with a small load, which runs on single-phase power (I'm not talking about the blower-motor Rolling Eyes ) is going to wind up very fast.
Work load has a factor in wind-up speed too. I have a 1-2 HP 120/240VAC motor just sitting around and it winds up in a split second with no load, but when we had it mounted in the big belt-driven industrial circulation fan that we used to have, it wound up slower, because of the big load on the motor. Same goes with my smaller 1/8HP 120VAC bathroom fan motor that I have (as seen in my "Thunderbolt Rotator Question" video).SirenMadness wrote:I'm not saying that all smaller motors will wind up very fast, but allot do.Jim Z wrote:I don't follow. The Thunderbolt's chopper motor is a two-horsepower, single phase motor.1. A one-horsepower motor with a small load, which runs on single-phase power (I'm not talking about the blower-motor Rolling Eyes ) is going to wind up very fast.
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