The H-100 motor can safely use Hammond quality oil, or other 5w to 10 w oils. It is not tern-plated (lead tin) and doesn't have pickups that can be shorted out by dendrites the way the TG can be. Don't over oil, as oil leaking inside can get between the rotor and stator and slow it down. "12 drops" in each end cap once a year.
The scanner is tern plated and has capacitor plates inside that could be shorted by dendrites. So use only hammond quality oil on it. That is 5 w single viscosity oil with no detergent and no zinc or aluminum additives. If you are in Dakota, I've tested the the mineral oil laxative from Meiers discount center, and found it to be all of the same viscosity. That is, 8 hours over low flame in a stainless steel cup, the oil doesn't decrease in volume. Since there is no zinc in the lable, zinc is a food suppliement, and mineral oil laxative is regulated by the FDA, there won't be any zinc in it. Test every bottle, suppliers might change and the new oil might be solvent plus sludge. Or buy the stuff from tonewheelgeneral.com bborgan.com, or hammond-suzuki.com
The square scanners use a felt resevoir in a tub, with a string running down to the bearing for the oil to move by capillary action, same as the TG bearings. This string, however, gets broken a lot by blind waving around of the oil spout.
Schematic diagram of the wiring is in the service manual on archive.org. Another copy of the schematics is at captain-foldback.com Between the two I can usually read it; the cut up one is hard to follow the wires across boundaries, and the complete one is fuzzy.
It is a two-phase motor with the second phase produced by the capacitor, which shifts the phase. If it is slow with a new in spec capacitor, the TG could need additional lubrication. It is difficult to over oil the TG, it just squirts out the end and drips if you do. If Mr Break-it took away the connector, it is a TE connectivity (AMP) Mate-n-Lock II 250 VAC rated one sold by newark and mouser. I had to replace a pin in mine the shorted motor capacitor (1997) burned the yellow wire insulation off all the way back to the connector block. I crimp any new pins with 5 movements of a slip joint plier instead of the $187 crimp tool.
If you'd put the model number in the thread title, I and Bobmann may have responded sooner. Not a lot of H100 fans here. I'm one, I own three of them and play mine in preference to the A100. Note my favorite H100 #9574 has 71 new electrolytic capacitors to improve the sound deteriorated badly by age. I'm thinking of diving into replacing the 110 harp capacitors this winter, too. You can hear #9574 using a microphone on inbojat.tumblr.com the "yellow bird" track. Other tracks to follow after the harp capacitors are replaced to eliminate the faint continuous whistle- F#6 I believe, bleeding through a leaky e-cap.
The scanner is tern plated and has capacitor plates inside that could be shorted by dendrites. So use only hammond quality oil on it. That is 5 w single viscosity oil with no detergent and no zinc or aluminum additives. If you are in Dakota, I've tested the the mineral oil laxative from Meiers discount center, and found it to be all of the same viscosity. That is, 8 hours over low flame in a stainless steel cup, the oil doesn't decrease in volume. Since there is no zinc in the lable, zinc is a food suppliement, and mineral oil laxative is regulated by the FDA, there won't be any zinc in it. Test every bottle, suppliers might change and the new oil might be solvent plus sludge. Or buy the stuff from tonewheelgeneral.com bborgan.com, or hammond-suzuki.com
The square scanners use a felt resevoir in a tub, with a string running down to the bearing for the oil to move by capillary action, same as the TG bearings. This string, however, gets broken a lot by blind waving around of the oil spout.
Schematic diagram of the wiring is in the service manual on archive.org. Another copy of the schematics is at captain-foldback.com Between the two I can usually read it; the cut up one is hard to follow the wires across boundaries, and the complete one is fuzzy.
It is a two-phase motor with the second phase produced by the capacitor, which shifts the phase. If it is slow with a new in spec capacitor, the TG could need additional lubrication. It is difficult to over oil the TG, it just squirts out the end and drips if you do. If Mr Break-it took away the connector, it is a TE connectivity (AMP) Mate-n-Lock II 250 VAC rated one sold by newark and mouser. I had to replace a pin in mine the shorted motor capacitor (1997) burned the yellow wire insulation off all the way back to the connector block. I crimp any new pins with 5 movements of a slip joint plier instead of the $187 crimp tool.
If you'd put the model number in the thread title, I and Bobmann may have responded sooner. Not a lot of H100 fans here. I'm one, I own three of them and play mine in preference to the A100. Note my favorite H100 #9574 has 71 new electrolytic capacitors to improve the sound deteriorated badly by age. I'm thinking of diving into replacing the 110 harp capacitors this winter, too. You can hear #9574 using a microphone on inbojat.tumblr.com the "yellow bird" track. Other tracks to follow after the harp capacitors are replaced to eliminate the faint continuous whistle- F#6 I believe, bleeding through a leaky e-cap.
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