OK, so I was less than intelligent this weekend (must have been too stuffed with- well stuffing..)
I was ripping some rough Red Oak I chainsaw milled by hand last year (probably 8/4 to 10/4) and I stalled the blade. When I cut the power and removed the board, the motor started, but made a clicking sound and seemed like it would not get up to full speed.
I took the side covers off, removed the motor housing, and manually rotated the blade arbor- no clicks. Put it back together, clicks. Pulled the brushes, no clicks. Could be brushes...nope. Bottom line, there is one segment raised slightly on the commutator of the motor, enough so the brushes briefly lose contact with the commutator. Hence, the click as the brush is pushed back down and the motor not reaching full speed.
Found the problem, that's the first part. Now...
New Armature $106.00 from Ryobi Parts Online- fine I can swing that...
But how do you remove the entire motor assembly to replace the armature?
I send an email to Ryobi Support, "I think I blew the armature out of my BT3100. I am thinking about ordering a replacement armature and brushes. Do you have instructions on how to remove the motor so I can replace it?"
Ryobi Supports give me... "Unfortunately no, we do not have any type of written directions for that detaled repair process, which should normally be handled by an authorized service dealer."
So now I am looking at labor and time in addition to the cost of the part.
Does someone here have instructions on how to change out their motor in the BT3100? I've looked at the belt changing directions here for the the BT3000- to those directions apply to the 3100 too??
I am looking for a DIY solution here as I can schedule my time to fix my saw vs. someone else who has other work orders ahead of mine. Of course I am in the middle of making clocks as Christmas Presents when I did this...
I'm willing to chalk all this up to my own stupidity (too fast a feed rate, should have put my 7-1/4" circular saw blade in instead of my 24T rip blade, etc, etc, etc) and pay the price for it...is there a DIY solution or should I just suck it up and take the saw to the service center??
Thanks folks for letting me vent at the very least and maybe get some ideas at the best...
I was ripping some rough Red Oak I chainsaw milled by hand last year (probably 8/4 to 10/4) and I stalled the blade. When I cut the power and removed the board, the motor started, but made a clicking sound and seemed like it would not get up to full speed.

I took the side covers off, removed the motor housing, and manually rotated the blade arbor- no clicks. Put it back together, clicks. Pulled the brushes, no clicks. Could be brushes...nope. Bottom line, there is one segment raised slightly on the commutator of the motor, enough so the brushes briefly lose contact with the commutator. Hence, the click as the brush is pushed back down and the motor not reaching full speed.

New Armature $106.00 from Ryobi Parts Online- fine I can swing that...
But how do you remove the entire motor assembly to replace the armature?

I send an email to Ryobi Support, "I think I blew the armature out of my BT3100. I am thinking about ordering a replacement armature and brushes. Do you have instructions on how to remove the motor so I can replace it?"
Ryobi Supports give me... "Unfortunately no, we do not have any type of written directions for that detaled repair process, which should normally be handled by an authorized service dealer."
So now I am looking at labor and time in addition to the cost of the part.
Does someone here have instructions on how to change out their motor in the BT3100? I've looked at the belt changing directions here for the the BT3000- to those directions apply to the 3100 too??
I am looking for a DIY solution here as I can schedule my time to fix my saw vs. someone else who has other work orders ahead of mine. Of course I am in the middle of making clocks as Christmas Presents when I did this...

I'm willing to chalk all this up to my own stupidity (too fast a feed rate, should have put my 7-1/4" circular saw blade in instead of my 24T rip blade, etc, etc, etc) and pay the price for it...is there a DIY solution or should I just suck it up and take the saw to the service center??
Thanks folks for letting me vent at the very least and maybe get some ideas at the best...
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