• Mechanical paper shredder sensor

    From bitrex@21:1/5 to All on Fri Apr 7 17:29:00 2023
    This crappy paper shredder uses a mechanical sensor to detect paper
    inserted, I think how it "works" is the lever arm rotates forward (to
    the left in the photo) hitting the momentary switch, the motor comes on
    and the worm gear attached to the driveshaft raises the smooth plate
    pulling the arm forward again until it hits the switch again, turning
    the motor off...I'm not sure that's quite right maybe someone could
    clarify the sequence.

    Kinda ingenious design when it works right, except in this model it
    never really did, the motor always spun too long and now it won't
    auto-detect entirely. The smooth plate likes to slip out of its
    position, but I'm unsure of its resting position or how tight the set
    screw above the spring needs to be to fix it (not sure what else could
    go wrong...) At least until I finish this shredding job and take it to
    the Goodwill, that is.

    Pics of the arrangement:

    <https://imgur.com/a/kuKct9f>

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From tschw10117@aol.com@21:1/5 to bitrex on Fri Apr 7 19:20:46 2023
    On Friday, April 7, 2023 at 4:29:07 PM UTC-5, bitrex wrote:
    This crappy paper shredder uses a mechanical sensor to detect paper inserted, I think how it "works" is the lever arm rotates forward (to
    the left in the photo) hitting the momentary switch, the motor comes on
    and the worm gear attached to the driveshaft raises the smooth plate
    pulling the arm forward again until it hits the switch again, turning
    the motor off...I'm not sure that's quite right maybe someone could
    clarify the sequence.

    Kinda ingenious design when it works right, except in this model it
    never really did, the motor always spun too long and now it won't auto-detect entirely. The smooth plate likes to slip out of its
    position, but I'm unsure of its resting position or how tight the set
    screw above the spring needs to be to fix it (not sure what else could
    go wrong...) At least until I finish this shredding job and take it to
    the Goodwill, that is.

    Pics of the arrangement:

    <https://imgur.com/a/kuKct9f>

    Try a good cleaning before you toss it. Maybe the switch is full of paper dust.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bitrex@21:1/5 to tschw...@aol.com on Sat Apr 8 11:23:21 2023
    On 4/7/2023 10:20 PM, tschw...@aol.com wrote:
    On Friday, April 7, 2023 at 4:29:07 PM UTC-5, bitrex wrote:
    This crappy paper shredder uses a mechanical sensor to detect paper
    inserted, I think how it "works" is the lever arm rotates forward (to
    the left in the photo) hitting the momentary switch, the motor comes on
    and the worm gear attached to the driveshaft raises the smooth plate
    pulling the arm forward again until it hits the switch again, turning
    the motor off...I'm not sure that's quite right maybe someone could
    clarify the sequence.

    Kinda ingenious design when it works right, except in this model it
    never really did, the motor always spun too long and now it won't
    auto-detect entirely. The smooth plate likes to slip out of its
    position, but I'm unsure of its resting position or how tight the set
    screw above the spring needs to be to fix it (not sure what else could
    go wrong...) At least until I finish this shredding job and take it to
    the Goodwill, that is.

    Pics of the arrangement:

    <https://imgur.com/a/kuKct9f>

    Try a good cleaning before you toss it. Maybe the switch is full of paper dust.

    I'll try that as well but I forgot to mention that the first
    fail-symptom was the plastic trigger was stuck in the forward position
    blocking the paper slot, sorry about that!

    So I think maybe there's something mechanical going on with the
    arm/gear, also. The lil metallic switch trigger seems to move freely
    otherwise.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)