You can see from the windings that things got pretty hot. The problem is that I always kept close watch of motor temperature and the outside never really went much above 100C (ok for SmCo motors). The windings however were hot enough to melt the solder on the Wye connection. After opening the motor to have a peak around, it seems the windings have poor thermal transfer to the stator. So the delta T between motor temp and winding temps gets out of hand very quickly.
Even so, the motor was still running just fine and never caused any problems until I changed gearing which let the motor rev a tiny bit higher (maybe around 13,000rpm). That's when one of the magnets decided to leave town. The stator is still "ok" and I may build my own rotor to get it working again, but the prototypes I'm finishing up will perform a lot better so there is not much point in bothering with it anymore.
P.S. I'm not knocking the Astro motor. I think under normal use it should be just fine, but I have a habit of running things harder and harder until something eventually blows
Even so, the motor was still running just fine and never caused any problems until I changed gearing which let the motor rev a tiny bit higher (maybe around 13,000rpm). That's when one of the magnets decided to leave town. The stator is still "ok" and I may build my own rotor to get it working again, but the prototypes I'm finishing up will perform a lot better so there is not much point in bothering with it anymore.
P.S. I'm not knocking the Astro motor. I think under normal use it should be just fine, but I have a habit of running things harder and harder until something eventually blows
