Shopping Cart

Your cart is empty.

Your cart is empty.

CHANCS TYC-50 Small Synchronous Motor 110V AC 15-18RPM Shaft Rotation CCW 4W Gear Motor for Electric Fireplace

Free shipping on orders over $29.99

$11.51

$ 5 .75 $5.75

In Stock

1.Size:4-4.8rpm Cw/ccw


About this item

  • This is a TYC-50 AC 110-127V 15-18RPM CCW synchronous motor,small power consumption, low noise, small size, light weight, easy to use. The reduction gear is combination of metal/plastic to ensure the gear working continuously and quietly. We promise we will tested ever motor before shipment.
  • 【Specification:】 Product Name : Synchronous Motor; Model : TYC-50; Shaft Diameter: 7mm ; Shaft Length: 16mm; Direction : CCW; Voltage : AC 110V-130V; Speed : 15-18RPM; Power : 4W; Torque:≤1.8kg*cm; Frequency : 50/ 60Hz;
  • 【Application:】 Widely used in hand-made, school project, electric fan shake heads, heaters, Christmas tree, prayer cylinders, air conditioners, microwave ovens, glue machines, electric ovens, rotating lamps, electric tables, electric models, electric advertising, electric shelves, dishwashers, control appliances , curtain machines, etc.
  • 【Package Content:】1 x Synchronous Motor
  • 【Attention:】 1.The applicable voltage of this motor is AC 110V-130V, too high voltage will burn the motor. 2.The motor speed is not an accurate value, the speed will change with the frequency. For example, the speed is 0.8-1RPM, at 50 Hz, the speed is 0.8RPM; at 60 Hz, the speed is 1RPM.



Product Description

1
1
Speed:

  • 0.8-1RPM
  • 2.5-3RPM
  • 5-6RPM
  • 10-12RPM
  • 15-18RPM
  • 20-24RPM
  • 30-36RPM

This speed is NOT a precise value, this motor is not suitable for precision instruments such as clocks.

Specification:

  • Shaft Diameter: 7mm ;
  • Shaft Length: 16mm;
  • Voltage : 110V;
  • Power : 4W;
  • Frequency : 50/ 60Hz;
Direction:

There are three types of motor steering:

  • CW;
  • CCW;
  • CW/CCW(UNCONTROLLABLE)

1

Small Power Consumption

Minimum power 4W.

1

Low noise, Good Quality

Metal-plastic hybrid gear, less noise, quieter motor operation.

1

Small Size, Big Torque

Motor length 57.5mm, thickness 20.8mm. High torque for DIY.

1

Easy to Install

Small weight, easy to install and use.

1

Nazeeh Ghadban
July 20, 2025
Bought this motor to install in a Halloween prop. It worked as expected and was easy to install.
Simon Smith
July 16, 2025
Bought this motor to replace the flicker rod motor in my Dimplex fireplace. Mounting holes are identical to the original, so the install only took a few minutes. The motor runs even quieter than the original, too. For less than $20 and a few minutes of labour I saved a $700 fireplace - well worth it. When purchasing just pay attention to the rotation direction: CW, CCW, or CW/CCW on the motor you are replacing and you will avoid the issues that other reviewers have noted.
Sandi Pinkerton
July 13, 2025
Works just as advertised and the right price. Bought as a replacement for a noisy motor in our electric fireplace.
CanadaMike
June 26, 2025
I bought this to replace the motor in a 12 year old Dimplex fireplace. The original had three leads with a capacitor....this had two leads. I took a chance and connected it without the cab and it worked fine. The shaft was 1mm larger than the original but as the connection was a spring I made it work. Substantially cheaper than factory and seems to work fine for what it's doing.
jean busque
June 4, 2025
Pour un foyer électrique model identique très satisfait Merci
kurt
April 19, 2025
I purchased this motor to replace a faulty one in a electric fire place. Little faster rotation than the old one but it works great
D.I.
April 12, 2025
I am very disappointed , this came and once plugged it makes crazy amount of noiseSometimes its best to read the 1 STAR reviews and believe what you read ...Not worth arguing about it and just tossed it in the garbage .....
Client d'
April 6, 2025
Pour un foyer électriqueJe suis très satisfaite du produit et du service Amazone
gcapp99
March 8, 2025
SHORT VERSION: I was pleasantly surprised to find this CHANCS motor available at a very reasonable price. It arrived next day and with the minor inconvenience of needing to splice on a couple of inches onto the wire leads, it's an identical part-swap, easy peasy.ALL THE BORING DETAILS: Our home has an electric fireplace that was here when we bought the house 6 months ago. I didnt think we would use it much but it works well as a room heater, allowing us to keep the main house thermostat on a more economical setting.Since the cold snap started here 2 months ago, we've been using it daily. Suddenly it started making a loud grinding noise. As I'm a well-experienced handy man, I thought the "squirrel cage" fan that blows the heated air into the room was starting to fail.Usually, it's not an actual part that wore out; The fan has bearings that chatter when the long life lubricant originally applied to them dries out. Taking the fan apart, cleaning it with an approved solvent, applying fresh lubricant restores the fan to like-new performance.When I put the fireplace back together & turned it on, I discovered that while the heater fan was much stronger at blowing hot air into the room, the loud grinding noise was still loud & clear.Turns out that the flame emulator uses what looks to be a rotisserie rod with half-inch mirrors that relect the light from a couple of chandelier bulbs as a small gear reduction motor rotates the mirrors at about 15RPM. The reflected light hits the back of the shadow box screen, giving the dynamic flame appearance when viewed from the front of the fireplace.I had made a "right church, wrong pew" mistake: The grinding noise was due to lubricant failure but not in the fan- the culprit was the mirror flame rod motor; Hardened grease caused the plastic gear array inside the motor to start snapping the teeth off which resulted in the grinding noise.ENDING REFRAIN: This CHANCS motor is the perfect fix option available at a very reasonable price. It's an identical part-swap, easy peasy.
Customer
March 7, 2025
Just what I was looking for
The Grief Guru
March 5, 2025
I needed to replace a flicker motor in a 16-year-old faux stove that is apparently now obsolete (both the stove and the motor). I ordered a motor from Chancs that I thought would work, but it didn't fit. I had to return it.I reached out to their customer support to see if maybe they had one that would be a direct replacement. They did not; however, after many emails between "Jane" and me with lots of questions, I finally chose this particular unit (CHANCS TYC-50 Small Synchronous Motor 110V AC 15-18RPM Shaft Rotation CCW 4W). It did require me to drill 2 new, small screw holes to mount it in the cabinet, but it was the right size to generally fit and close to the original RPMs. It is working great. They also told me how to wire it - my original had 3 wires and a capacitor. The replacement had only 2 and did not need the capacitor.I am grateful for Jane's patience and willingness to help me find a solution - even to the point of searching other suppliers. Who does that? Ultimately, we did find one from Chancs that would work, so I am pleased. Yes, they are in China, and I know from experience that not all of the companies over there can be trusted. I believe this is one that IS trustworthy. Should I have need of a small motor again (microwave, the other fireplace, etc.) I will start my search with them.
James
December 18, 2024
It's not the same part number but very similar specs. Runs smooth and quiet. Highly recommend part
Milo
December 17, 2024
Used this to replace the motor on my electric fireplace. Other reviews are saying their fire moves in the wrong direction half the time so they turn the unit on and off until it moves in the right direction. All of those people ordered the wrong motor. If you’re lucky, the motor you’re replacing will say CW or CCW on it like mine did (mine was CCW). If it doesn’t, take the old motor out and look at it so the post is pointing at you. Turn the post and see which way it turns. It should only turn one direction. If it turns counterclockwise, get a CCW motor, clockwise, a CW motor. The default choice for this motor goes both directions CW/CCW. I believe that motor turns CW or CCW randomly, hence other reviewers’ backwards flames. So click the CW or CCW button to select the correct one.This was easy to install and I’m not very mechanically inclined. I just didn’t want to shell out $300 for a new fireplace. The wires are short, but I didn’t need to add an extension. The diameter of the post on the new motor was bigger than the old one. The part that fits over the post on my unit was rubber so it did fit, just with a little extra force, and the hole lined up for the retaining pin to go through. Lastly, the new motor is louder than the old one, but not terribly. I don’t notice it if the fireplace fan is running or if the tv is on.There is also a YouTube video showing a guy installing this exact motor. It may be helpful.