- Location
- San Francisco Bay Area, CA, USA
- Occupation
- Electrical Engineer
Then it can only be the tweaked frame issue in my opinion. Rolled steel motor frames are notorious for this because as mentioned, cast aluminum frames will often break rather than twist and cast iron frames are so rigid that they can warp the base or pull anchors out of concrete if not flat, so you know right away when you made the mistake.No load not coupled to anything motor only
When a motor is removed, it's common practice to use a scratch awl or even a sharpie pen to mark the shims, the frame and the base so that the shims go back into the same place in the same way to correct for flatness issues. I've seen where unskilled people remove motors and don't know to do that, they think the shims are just there to act like washers so they put them back in randomly or not at all. I'm guessing that's what has happened here.