Palasr,
Yes, I am aware that it is a synchronous motor. I was trying to account for what the poster said. He is NOT using an outboard power supply for the motor, and I doubt that the built in circuitry regenerates AC and could be outputting the wrong frequency due to damage as you think might be the case. I would agree that if the built-in circuitry stepped the voltage down so low as to slow the motor down, the more likely event is that it would not turn at all, but, still I can't otherwise account for why the motor turned too slowly when first plugged in.
What happened at first, is somewhat irrelevant. The table is now running too fast, consistent with a change from 50Hz to 60Hz AC. The cheapest thing to try IS a change in pulley.
Yes, I am aware that it is a synchronous motor. I was trying to account for what the poster said. He is NOT using an outboard power supply for the motor, and I doubt that the built in circuitry regenerates AC and could be outputting the wrong frequency due to damage as you think might be the case. I would agree that if the built-in circuitry stepped the voltage down so low as to slow the motor down, the more likely event is that it would not turn at all, but, still I can't otherwise account for why the motor turned too slowly when first plugged in.
What happened at first, is somewhat irrelevant. The table is now running too fast, consistent with a change from 50Hz to 60Hz AC. The cheapest thing to try IS a change in pulley.