Nottingham spacedeck motor - driving me crazy


I have a Nottingham space deck that is driving me crazy. I can only get the turntable to spin at 45 rpm, it will not spin at 33 rpm. The oil level is fine, the pulley alignment is fine. Without the belt the turntable, when pushed, spins forever.
Can anyone help??
Many thanks
thecat61

Showing 3 responses by robdoorack

There's no clutch in the Spacedeck's motor. It's a simple AC synchronous motor, intentionally too weak to start the mass of the platter from a stop. The Spacedeck's designer, the late Tom Fletcher, argued that the motor's real job is just to keep the platter rotating. He believed that motors powerful enough to put the platter in motion were therefore oversized for their real job and vibrated too much. I vaguely recall experiencing the original poster's problem once. As I recall the issue is really that the motor (which is on a separate chassis or pod) has moved slightly closer to the platter, reducing the belt tension and causing it to slip on the pulley. Replacing the silicon belt with a string fixed the symptom because the string has greater "traction" than the OEM belt. My suggestion is to clean the belt with some cold water and dish soap, put it back in place, and move the motor away from the platter a small distance.
I suspect that the reason the belt doesn't slip at 45RPM is because the 45RPM pulley has a larger diameter than the 33RPM pulley. Since the grooves for both speeds on the Spacedeck's platter are the same diameter, the belt must stretch to accomodate the bigger pulley. That stretch probably means that the belt is pulling "harder" on the 45RPM pulley than on the smaller one. The distance between the motor and platter seems to be critical. I have a PDF copy of the NA dealer manual and it calls for 6mm between the two pieces.
Good point, John. I'd forgotten about that NA motor quirk. Here's what the dealer manual says about the motor height: "The motor height is adjustable and it is important to line up the grooves on the pulley with the grooves on the platter. Make sure the table is leveled first. If you need to raise or lower the motor, do so by pushing on the motor itself. It is snug in its housing, but it will move."

You shouldn't need to loosen the screws holding the motor to the housing to do this.