February, 2004 -- January, 2007.
 The primary power in a vertical milling machine is an electric motor 
driving the spindle. In this project, I replaced the original 1-HP 3-phase 230 
VAC electric spindle motor on a Bridgeport machine with a 3/4-HP DC drive motor. 
By adapting surplus, high-quality components, I was able to implement the 
superior characteristics of DC drive for less than the cost of the usual VFD 
retrofit.
 The primary power in a vertical milling machine is an electric motor 
driving the spindle. In this project, I replaced the original 1-HP 3-phase 230 
VAC electric spindle motor on a Bridgeport machine with a 3/4-HP DC drive motor. 
By adapting surplus, high-quality components, I was able to implement the 
superior characteristics of DC drive for less than the cost of the usual VFD 
retrofit. 
Benefits of DC drive include:
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DC motors and controls offer another solution to the power compatibility problem, while offering distinct mechanical advantages compared to any method involving stock AC motors:
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For all their advantages, DC motors are not used much because both motors and controls are expensive, and the brushed designs require periodic maintenance for brush inspection and replacement. But it is primarly the cost of DC motors and drives preventing their use in machine tools. However, in my experiments with DC motors for servo control, I acquired a number of permanent magnet DC (PMDC) motors and controllers at very low cost.
This photo shows the finished project, with the blue motor and blue adapter plate installed on the Bridgeport milling machine. The 1970s-vintage machine is equipped with a Bridgeport J-head, which originally had a 1-HP 3-phase "pancake" motor installed where the DC motor is now installed. To mount the DC drive controller and power connections, I bent and flattened some 1/2" thin-wall electrical conduit (EMT) using a conduit bender and arbor press, and attached it to the motor where the baseplate would attached with 5/16" screws. The flattened end of the conduit at the front of the J-head holds the potentiometer which controls the motor speed. The empty hole just below will hold a manual on-off switch (for now I just use a socket strip) connected to the controller's low-voltage start-stop signal; the planned CNC conversion will control the motor directly. This is all up on top of the machine, over 6 feet high, where it is out of the way of chips and materials.
Let's go through the steps involved in this project. 
 
 
The controller (seen mounted on the conduit tube in the first photo) is a single circuit board about 6-inches square and 1-inch high, with its own aluminum heat sink. Controllers like this are typically about $300. This one happens to be an Electrol model 790, likewise an eBay purchase for $75. It can be jumpered for 120 or 240 VAC input, and configured with switches and potentiometers for acceleration, deceleration, min/max speeds, torque limit, IR feedback compensation, and 90 vs 180 VDC motors.
DC motors and controllers are standard industrial items widely available from 
suppliers like Grainger. There are 
cheaper controls available that provide only speed regulation that would be 
suitable. If you were shopping for appropriate items, you would want to consider 
an appropriate horsepower, and find a compatible (or at least adaptable) shaft 
size and mounting configuration, such as the NEMA 56C size shown here. 
 
 
MSC sells a similar cone pulley in various shaft bore sizes. The 5/8" bore is 
part number 00053843. 
The 3/4" bore is part number 00053850. 
These have stepped nominal OD sizes of 3, 4, 5, and 6 inches. The pitch 
diameters are 2.7, 3.7, 4.7, and 5.7 respectively. 
 
 
 Same motor shaft, with the bushing installed.
 Same motor shaft, with the bushing installed.  Same motor again, with the bushing and cone pulley installed.
 Same motor again, with the bushing and cone pulley installed.  This is the completed motor assembly before mounting.
 This is the completed motor assembly before mounting. 
 Here is the drawing. Select the thumbnail at left to bring up 
the detailed PDF version.
 Here is the drawing. Select the thumbnail at left to bring up 
the detailed PDF version. 
 
 
| If you don't care to make this adapter plate yourself, the completed item, now fabricated on my CNC Bridgeport milling machine (instead of the manual layout and machining described here), is available direct from me for $250. The plate is supplied with a standard 3-inch center hole, and is ready for you to drill for your motor's bolt-circle mounting holes. Shipping is via USPS Priority Mail for an additional $10. USA addresses only. Shipment is 1 week from receipt of your order and payment. | 
The original Bridgeport "pancake" motors use a short, fat design that mounts directly to the large opening in the J-head aluminum casement. The new motor is relatively tall and skinny, and therefore requires a custom mounting plate to adapt the face to the opening in the J-head, and to align the drive pulley to the driven pulley. By making a lot of measurements and sketches, I came up with this design [drawing, 118 KB PDF file] for the adapter plate. See also the 3D model [21 KB DWF file, requires the free Autodesk DWF Viewer]. This started as a rough hand sketch [drawing, 22 KB PDF file]. The plate is cut from 5/16" thick aluminum sheet, on which I painted blue layout dye and scored layout axes and positions using a carbide scribe, ruler, caliper points, and a compass. The mounting of this plate, and therefore the center cutout, are rather unusual, because the axial alignment required that the rear of the motor faceplate (instead of the front as usual) attach to the adapter plate. The center cutout is therefore sized to pass the body of the motor, with notches for clearance to the gussets reinforcing the motor faceplate, and 4 holes for the 5.875" diameter bolt circle attachment of the motor. The two "ears" at the edge of the adapter (shown with the original 1/2" hold-down bolts from the old motor) attach the motor to the J-head. To make this complex cutout, I wrote G-code by hand for the CNC mill-drill machine, which cut and drilled the pattern using 1/4" and 3/8" end mills. I checked the G-code by dry-running the paths on the machine, and watching that the tool path followed the manual scribe marks. Hand-written G-code for a shape like this involves some tricky trigonometry, and I had to make quite a few corrections to the code before it was correct and ready to commit to metal. Aside from the ears, the outside edge is only roughly cut on the band saw, since the mill-drill travel was insufficient to reach the edges of the nearly 11 inches of diameter. I could have done a neater job of CNC cutting the curves by re-clamping and re-registering the work, but this was not worth the effort for a non-functional aspect of a one-off part.
You may notice that the adapter plate mounts oddly onto the motor, being 
bolted to the back side of the face flange, instead of normally on the front. 
This was necessary to get the proper axial alignment of the motor to the machine 
casement, such that the drive pulley lines up with the driven pulley. This 
modified mounting successfully fit the random motor I happened to have to the 
machine. A motor in a different power size might have had the proper alignment 
and shaft size, or might have required a different adaptation. This is something 
to plan carefully for when shopping for a motor. 
 
 
 
  
  This is the view from the operator's normal position of the 
installed drive. I hope to make a proper enclosure for the control board, speed 
dial, and on-off switch.
 This is the view from the operator's normal position of the 
installed drive. I hope to make a proper enclosure for the control board, speed 
dial, and on-off switch. 
The drive is a joy to operate, with the tiny dial giving complete control of the motor speed from 0 to 1750 rpm. For routine work, I keep the pulley on the third-highest step, disengage the backgear, and use the speed control dial to set the proper speed for the application. By varying the step-pulley and backgear combinations, I can further vary speed and torque with gear ratios in various steps from about 1.6 down to 0.046. Since the motor develops about 3 ft-lb continuous torque (and a potential for some multiples of that), the spindle can be geared down to a few rpm at over 65 ft-lbs, which translates to several tons of force on the edge of a 1/2" cutter. Try that with your VFD!
Looked at the speed ratios another way, the stock motor specifies 1730 rpm at 
60 Hz 3-phase power. The spindle speed table stamped on the head of the 
Bridgeport machine says the spindle speeds for the four pulley steps are 660, 
1115, 1750, and 2720 rpm. These are ratios of 0.382, 0.645, 1.01, and 1.57 from 
the nominal 1730 rpm motor. Since I am using the 3rd step for general work, this 
is more or less a 1:1 ratio of spindle to motor. The ratios given by Bridgeport 
must include some significant belt slippage, since the pulleys are of obviously 
different diameter. 
 Bob McKee kindly sent me photos of his DC drive retrofit. Bob used a 
new 3/4 HP Electrol motor he found on eBay. He used a KBCC-R controller and 
fabricated a box to house it, mounted on the left of the mill, replacing the 
original forward-off-reverse switch for the original 3-phase motor. Bob reports 
that he "wanted the reverse to perform dead spindle tapping; it works great. The 
switches on the motor control box are: Top Left, Power on and off. Lower Left, 
Machine on and off. Lower Right, Forward/Brake/Reverse. Upper Right, Speed 
Control."
 Bob McKee kindly sent me photos of his DC drive retrofit. Bob used a 
new 3/4 HP Electrol motor he found on eBay. He used a KBCC-R controller and 
fabricated a box to house it, mounted on the left of the mill, replacing the 
original forward-off-reverse switch for the original 3-phase motor. Bob reports 
that he "wanted the reverse to perform dead spindle tapping; it works great. The 
switches on the motor control box are: Top Left, Power on and off. Lower Left, 
Machine on and off. Lower Right, Forward/Brake/Reverse. Upper Right, Speed 
Control."  
 
 
 A fellow named Joe sent me this photo of his DC drive retrofit. He 
used a 1 HP Pacific Scientific motor (new) and a Dart DC controller (new) from 
eBay for a grand total of $110. His mill is an Acra make, which is an imported 
Bridgeport copy, and which uses the step-pulley drive.
 A fellow named Joe sent me this photo of his DC drive retrofit. He 
used a 1 HP Pacific Scientific motor (new) and a Dart DC controller (new) from 
eBay for a grand total of $110. His mill is an Acra make, which is an imported 
Bridgeport copy, and which uses the step-pulley drive. 
 John Horton wrote to say, "I made the plate from your drawing, The 
motor is a 1.25 HP 180 volt from surpluscenter.com [part number 10-2213]. 
Controller is a Beel industries unit. Works great. It will not stall even on the 
heaviest cuts." Suitable controllers available from surpluscenter.com look to be 
the open-frame Minarik MM23001C (surpluscenter.com part number 11-2269) 
or the encased and assembled (part number 11-2102).
 John Horton wrote to say, "I made the plate from your drawing, The 
motor is a 1.25 HP 180 volt from surpluscenter.com [part number 10-2213]. 
Controller is a Beel industries unit. Works great. It will not stall even on the 
heaviest cuts." Suitable controllers available from surpluscenter.com look to be 
the open-frame Minarik MM23001C (surpluscenter.com part number 11-2269) 
or the encased and assembled (part number 11-2102).