Model: 1696520-00
I'm working on a Simplicity snow blower with an electric chute. It came to me with the chute not working. It looked as if the chute moved all the way to one side and jammed up. I removed and bench-tested the motor, checked the wiring for damage and continuity, and tested the switch. I reinstalled everything. Cleaned terminals and added dielectric, greased gears, and chute ring gear and got everything working again. Initially, I had an occasional hiccup with the chute not responding briefly so I adjusted the position of the motor and the way the teeth meshed and everything seems to work now.
I know that the continuity test doesn't tell the full story on the wiring but It's tough to load test the system with the way the wiring is put together. I'm wondering how the system works. There doesn't seem to be any limit mechanism for when the chute reaches its limit on either side. I'm wondering if the motor just stops when it hits a certain amount of resistance. There also appears to be a rectifier in the system that I'm guessing is for the chute since based on how the switch works, it appears that it it just reverses the current from the stator for each direction.
I guess I'm just wondering how it works so I can figure out if I need to replace any components. I feel good about the wiring, switch, and connectors. I guess the motor could be on its way out but I don't fully understand how it knows when it hits the end. If it's just resistance, then I probably solved the problem with lubrication and adjustment of how the teeth mesh.
Thank you