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« Reply #10 on: January 31, 2005, 05:18:37 pm » |
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Dave, might I ask how old you are? And which part of the lovely island do you live in?
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Kilroy
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« Reply #11 on: January 31, 2005, 07:43:23 pm » |
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Dave, you can figure out the age of your Vendo with the following formula: I found this info at Colamachines.com:
V39 =Serves 39 Bottles Serial # The serial number is typically made up of 8 numbers.
The first number is the year the machine was produced. The second number is the month. The last 5 numbers are the actual serial numbers.
Example: Serial Number : 21014601
First number was 2 = 1952 Second & Third numbers were 10 = October Which means that this machine was made in October of 1952 and has a serial number of 14601.
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"Restored they go for $6-7,000!!" Member : Michigan Mafia
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davethebirdman
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« Reply #12 on: February 01, 2005, 10:31:51 am » |
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Hi Kito
I am 38yrs old and live just north of London in Hertfordshire. Moved out to the country a few years ago from the smog.
Kilroy
Thanks for the info on the serial numbers. It would appear that my machine was built in 1954 beating my Juke by a whole year and taking pride of place as my oldest Antique piece of Americana.
Dave
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« Reply #13 on: February 01, 2005, 01:11:49 pm » |
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Glad you're here Dave. I am 36 years old and live in Minnesota in the US, but as I mentioned earlier, I went to Lancaster University in Lancashire. I have a lot of really close British friends that I met when I was there. They have visited me and I have gone back there several times.
I say show us the flag of England, rather than the whole U.K.
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joesquid
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« Reply #14 on: February 02, 2005, 06:01:31 pm » |
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Dave, I'm Eric and have been following the ongoing thread concerning your Vendo 39 fan problem. Perhaps I missed this point somewhere, but which fan is causing the problem, the evaporator fan (located in the bottle compartment) or the condensor fan (located next to the compressor)? When you touch it to get it started again, are you actually rotating the fan physically or wiggling the wire? It sounds like you may have a broken lead in the motor, in which case no amount of oiling is going to fix the problem. In all honesty you'd probably be better off replacing it anyway to truly resolve the problem. I'm am electrician by trade currently serving in the United States Navy in Norfolk, Virginia and have ready access to replacement motors. If you should decide to go this route, let me know and I'll locate a replacement for you.
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Eric "Joe Squid" Johnson
1955 Vendo 23 - awaiting restoration 1959 Westinghouse WC-44SK - awaiting parts 1967 Cavalier CS-64G - functional in house 1969 Vendo 63 - in restoration
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davethebirdman
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« Reply #15 on: February 07, 2005, 02:39:14 pm » |
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Hi Eric
sorry for the delay in getting back to you. I currently have three dead Jukeboxes all as a result of changing a faulty tube. They have been taking all my time and energy.
The Vendo - I should have made it much clearer. The fan that has a intermitent fault is the one in the bottle compartment. I have run the machine now for about a week and its only stopped twice. No big deal but still annoying.
To get it going again all I do is give the fan blades themselves just a very slight tap with a finger and "Hey Presto" they are away.
I changed the harness thingy (the one with the wires coming out of it) a while ago but that didn't stop the problem occuring, as I say, only very occasionally.
Another newbie question. Should the upper fan stop when the right temp is met?? Mine runs the whole time.
Cheers
Dave (I'll have to get a nice logo )
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joesquid
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« Reply #16 on: February 07, 2005, 04:28:35 pm » |
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Dave, No problem, I understand what it's like not to have enough time. To answer your question concerning the evaporator fan (the one in the bottle compartment), it should run when the door is closed. There's a pushbutton switch in the main door jamb that actuates when the main door is closed and turns on the fan. When the door is open the fan should stop. Not a big deal if this doesn't happen, merely a safety feature to prevent possible loss of extremeties (i.e. "fingers") while the main door is open.
Back to the fan, can you send pics of your machine, especially of the evap fan? Depending on the fan type currently in use, I could probably find you a replacement pretty cheap. If you can write down the data on the back of the fan motor housing (stamped into the metal) that would be very helpful too. There should be a model and/or serial number, voltage rating, RPM rating, wattage, amperage, and direction of rotation (CW = clockwise, CCW = counter-clock wise).
Thanks
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Eric "Joe Squid" Johnson
1955 Vendo 23 - awaiting restoration 1959 Westinghouse WC-44SK - awaiting parts 1967 Cavalier CS-64G - functional in house 1969 Vendo 63 - in restoration
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Guest
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« Reply #17 on: February 07, 2005, 05:56:42 pm » |
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hi dave, the evaporator fan ( in the bottle compartment ) runs all the time, except you open the door (when there is a switch ). the condenser fan ( near the compressor ) usually stops when the compressor shuts off. lars
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