Coincidentally most Treadmills use a 80-260 VDC motor with a suitable HP rating and a PWM motor speed controller to allow the user to change the belt speed and keep a good constant speed and torque while running on it.
There are Commercial DC Motor/PWM controllers available or you can build the PWM circuit from scratch and buy all the components seperately but you will spend a lot of time and money either way. All the parts you need are on the treadmill.
Tear your own apart or get one on Ebay.
(shameless self-promotion below)
Motor/controller combos on Ebay
Safety and Disclaimers- You should have some knowledge of electricity and the dangers of household current and know your abilities/inabilities. Serious injury may occur to you or others from use/misuse of these motor set-up. If you are in doubt DO NOT ATTEMPT. IT CAN KILL YOU. Any Crazy Ideas found here REQUIRE your testing. Your appliction and use of any ideas here are all on you and you agree I cannot be held liable. You equipment should have On/Off safety switches, Fuse protection, ground wires on your machine as required and your power source should have ground fault interupters, circuit breakers,properly grounded sockets and cords and always unplug equipment before tinkering and any other safety practise I am forgetting to mention.
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It has a delayed start feature,does any one no how to adjust or disable the delay start . I am going to use the motor for a pig roaster (spit) and I dont want my Piggy to burn before this thing kicks in. I havent timed it but it seems to take 30 seconds to 1 minute before it kick on ?
I've got a Power First Treadmill here with a 180V DC motor and controller board.
The interesting thing is, the board has L W H as you have already covered. But it also has an additional H M.
Any ideas what the extra H and M are?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oEUYII-SYGg
http://i675.photobucket.com/albums/vv111/ezra1976/treadmill3.jpg
http://i675.photobucket.com/albums/vv111/ezra1976/treadmill2.jpg
http://i675.photobucket.com/albums/vv111/ezra1976/treadmill1.jpg
check out this nice tutorial on working of DC motors
http://www.engineersgarage.com/insight/how-dc-motor-works
I don't think it makes too much difference. I have gotten 3 "dead or dying" treadmills off craigslist free section over a two year span. One was only missing the little safety key which I bypassed while the another was suffering from loss of lubrication to the treadmill belt. The last "dead" one was nothing more than junk stuck into the the treadmill by a toddler which got into the belt and jammed it! All of this to say, you may not have to pay for one which still has good motor and speed control! Most people don't know that treadmills will need some maintenance after they get older. Things like cleaning them out, lubing belt with special lube, adjusting tension of belt, replacement of drive belt coming off motor, even faulty wall plug or treadmill plug! These motor/speed controls work good for all kinds of stuff like industrial sewing machine, drill stand, old or homemade lathes, adjustable fans, stationary sander, and even for windmill generators! The possibilities are almost endless!
enjoy