ROOF OR WALL EXHAUST FAN BELT REPLACEMENT
Posted by sachin on
We received a call today about replacement belts, so here’s some quick thoughts (as in NOT EXHAUSTIVE) for roof or wall exhaust fan belt replacement:
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Identify belt length and type BUY NOW
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- Measure center to center on pulleys (aka sheaves)
- Measure the outside diameter of each pulley
- Measure the width of the pulley gap where the belt enters
- Typically the belts are V type, with either an A or B width
- If low HP type fans, usually A
- If high HP, usually B
- Count the number of grooves (usually one or two) – this tells you how many belts are needed.
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Buy the replacement belts-LOL (if you want the best set-it-and-forget-it solution, click here to give us some details and we’ll quote you what we use)
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Put the new belts on starting on the smallest pulley and rolling on to larger
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Check tension by twisting the belt at the center point – proper tension is typically a half turn at the center distance between pulleys (this is not technically spot on but tends to be very close and avoids needing a belt tension measuring device in a pinch – for less critical equipment like this it works fine)
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If tension is too tight or too loose, adjust at the motor mount (should have a way to adjust distance) NOTE: If you use our belt solution above you won’t need to do this!
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Re-check belt tension after the fan has run for a few weeks as the belts tend to stretch during break-in. NOTE: If you use our belt solution above you won’t need to do this!
Things to avoid:
- Disconnect and lockout the power before you touch anything!
- Belt over-tightening – leads to premature bearing and belt failure
- Belt under-tightening – leads to loss of power transfer along with a premature belt and pulley failure
- Pulley/Sheave misalignment – check 3 planes with a straight edge/string/laser