The only real flaw in the Ellis system is that all of their new washer control panel are extremely sensitive to moisture so for all of those plants that use and overhead rail system if they have a bunch of wet product it will drip on the panels and activate every button as the droplets slide down the panels face. The old washers had the blister style buttons that had to be physically depressed to operate and they were waterproof as well. Changing over to touchscreens seemed more like one of those ideas that came from upper management over engineering.
I ordered a shut down for a week, for safety. My boss wasn't happy but insisted till the door was fixed, emesis power ,like a turbo jet.I'd Rather have production delay then serious injury. That alot of power
Wow 900lb washer only pulls 159g force in final spin?! Dryers must have to work overtime getting the moisture out of the laundry. I seen washers that r open pocket models go at 250 to 300g force. 159g force is slow lol
@@washingandmowing15 No it does both laundry and rugs. Yes walk in rubber mats r common to wash in there but look at some linen service videos they use these for 900lbs of linen and towels, napkins and uniforms. Anything can be washed in their
I would like to know how in the hell can that little bitty motor spin that big huge drum in that washer without burning up because that is a very small motor on that washing machine.
@@ChristianPinnock-u5c We have 8 of these in the plant I work at, they have 125a breakers. When in extraction ( spins really fast at the end like a home washer) they are doing around 250g force at 600 rpm…. But these are actually small washers, I’ve worked a couple plants with tunnel washers, check out Jensen wash tunnel videos. The tunnel washers usually do 150 lbs every 90 seconds because it will wash up to 14 loads simultaneously.
They're driven by a hydraulic system using stators. The motor itself is 8hp. It only looks small because the machine itself is bulky. The beauty of the hydraulic system over a conventionally driven one is that the electric motor that drives the system is separated from any inertia by the hydraulic fluid itself, which has an overpressure system that can relieve any pressure the motor/driving pump couldn't handle back into a reservoir tank. Plus, the motor has the standard industrial contactor/disconnector system that will shut it off automatically to keep it from being burned up as well.
Whoa that sounds louder than a fighter jet 😂
I love how it sounds
I'm surprised he's not deaf a machine like that can seriously make you go deaf with all that noise 😢
@@ChristianPinnock-u5c i know it's very noisy
The only real flaw in the Ellis system is that all of their new washer control panel are extremely sensitive to moisture so for all of those plants that use and overhead rail system if they have a bunch of wet product it will drip on the panels and activate every button as the droplets slide down the panels face.
The old washers had the blister style buttons that had to be physically depressed to operate and they were waterproof as well. Changing over to touchscreens seemed more like one of those ideas that came from upper management over engineering.
I ordered a shut down for a week, for safety. My boss wasn't happy but insisted till the door was fixed, emesis power ,like a turbo jet.I'd Rather have production delay then serious injury. That alot of power
You did the right thing. You were looking out for coworkers safety.
Door not getting closed. How can we troubleshoot?
Bel video
Is the water gas heated?
wow
Bel Video
Where is this located?
Wow 900lb washer only pulls 159g force in final spin?! Dryers must have to work overtime getting the moisture out of the laundry. I seen washers that r open pocket models go at 250 to 300g force. 159g force is slow lol
Wow never saw a 900lb washer before. I could probably fit in there 😂
This is for huge rugs, not laundry just to let you know, and yes, thats slow...
@@washingandmowing15 No it does both laundry and rugs. Yes walk in rubber mats r common to wash in there but look at some linen service videos they use these for 900lbs of linen and towels, napkins and uniforms. Anything can be washed in their
@@mikeschulte4271 Yes, I saw that; sorry about that.
@@washingandmowing15 no worries ur good ! When u go to hotels do u like to see the industrial laundry? I do and they usually let me get pics
I would like to know how in the hell can that little bitty motor spin that big huge drum in that washer without burning up because that is a very small motor on that washing machine.
Hydraulic motor… the pump is down behind the machine
@@prestongrayson5545how much power does this beast draw
@@ChristianPinnock-u5c We have 8 of these in the plant I work at, they have 125a breakers. When in extraction ( spins really fast at the end like a home washer) they are doing around 250g force at 600 rpm…. But these are actually small washers, I’ve worked a couple plants with tunnel washers, check out Jensen wash tunnel videos. The tunnel washers usually do 150 lbs every 90 seconds because it will wash up to 14 loads simultaneously.
They're driven by a hydraulic system using stators. The motor itself is 8hp. It only looks small because the machine itself is bulky. The beauty of the hydraulic system over a conventionally driven one is that the electric motor that drives the system is separated from any inertia by the hydraulic fluid itself, which has an overpressure system that can relieve any pressure the motor/driving pump couldn't handle back into a reservoir tank.
Plus, the motor has the standard industrial contactor/disconnector system that will shut it off automatically to keep it from being burned up as well.
DO NOT RUN WITH BELT COVER EXPOSED. I USED TO Run this at a Max of 180 pounds. Older model, door would bend open, didn't have the rpms for reference.
Rolamento aguenta tranco
That was cherry tree but ITS LARGE
E bem provável que na prática não funciona muita farinha para pouca farofa.
Concorrente? Quer que eu venda sua máquina?
lg washer learn about cradle wash cylinder