How to clean and repair the fan in your calorifer
ID: 194273
Description: [youtubevideo|753QmAPJl78]If the fan in your...
Steps:
- Pull the power plug from the wall before touching any part of the calorifer.
- Work only on a cooled-down unit in a dry, well-ventilated area with good lighting.
- Lay the heater on its back and undo all visible flathead screws that hold the shell together.
- Newer units usually hide the fan behind two screws and spring clips, yet the disassembly sequence remains identical.
- Put the screws aside in a dedicated tray so none are lost during the repair.
- Lift the front and rear covers away, watching for tight design trims and hidden tabs.
- Avoid tugging on internal wires while removing the casing.
- Vacuum or blow away all packed dust from heaters, fan blades, and grilles using a brush, toothbrush, or compressed air.
- Dust on hot elements is a potential fire source, so remove every deposit.
- Photograph the exact order and colours of all motor leads so reassembly is foolproof.
- Label any identical connectors if photos are unclear.
- Unhook the wires, undo the fastening screws, and lift the motor-fan assembly from the frame.
- Rotate the fan by hand; rough grinding indicates bearing damage.
- Check each bronze bushing: if it has fallen out, crumbled, or allows excessive shaft play, it must be replaced or reset.
- Confirm the rotor shaft is not blue or darkened, which would signal overheating.
- A bushing set contains the sleeve, felt oil wick, and tolerance ring that locks it in place.
- Install the sleeve with its sharp edge facing outward so the ring cannot jump during operation.
- Pad a small vise with wood, align the new bushing in its housing, and apply even pressure to seat it.
- If the vise alone cannot flare the metal, use a socket as a drift, then tap the edge with a punch and hammer to peen the housing lip over the sleeve.
- Work around the perimeter gradually to avoid cracking the casting.
- Repeat the staking on the opposite side of the motor.
- Add a few drops of machine oil onto the felt until it is fully saturated.
- Slide the rotor shaft through each sleeve and spin it gently so oil wicks into the contact surfaces.
- Position the endbells, plastic spacers, and rotor exactly as photographed, ensuring the long shaft faces the fan wheel.
- Insert the spring washer and retaining screw, then tighten opposite sides alternately so the rotor runs true.
- Verify the shaft turns freely without scraping before proceeding.
- Clean any oil from the motor shaft section that will mate with the rubber fan coupling using solvent or degreaser.
- Prevent solvent from seeping into the motor windings.
- Apply a light coat of oil to the fan coupling and mounting grommets so they slide into place without tearing.
- Keep the rear rubber surface oil-free, as it must grip the shaft firmly.
- Fit any distance washers first, lower the motor into position, and align the shaft with the rubber seat.
- Start all motor screws by hand, then alternate tightening to draw the assembly down evenly.
- Reinstall the heater covers, insert every screw, and check that the grille does not touch the fan blades.
- Reconnect the plug, switch the calorifer on, and confirm smooth rotation and normal heating.
- If abnormal sounds persist, shut off power immediately and recheck bushing seating.