Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
(OP)
Hi guys I'm new here and in need of your professional advice.
I have a burnt Karcher HD 6/15C pressure washer. The motor was a 230Vac single phase 50Hz 3.1kw we connect it to 230Vac 60Hz and the windings get burnt.
Now I'd like to rewind it and I've been searching the net on how to convert it to same voltage but at 60Hz.
Do I need to increase the turns by 60/50 and reduce the wire size by 50/60 in circular mils for me to convert it from 50Hz to 60Hz motor? and also do I need to change the capacitor value?
Thanks


Starting Coil

Running Coil
I have a burnt Karcher HD 6/15C pressure washer. The motor was a 230Vac single phase 50Hz 3.1kw we connect it to 230Vac 60Hz and the windings get burnt.
Now I'd like to rewind it and I've been searching the net on how to convert it to same voltage but at 60Hz.
Do I need to increase the turns by 60/50 and reduce the wire size by 50/60 in circular mils for me to convert it from 50Hz to 60Hz motor? and also do I need to change the capacitor value?
Thanks


Starting Coil

Running Coil





RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
Bill
--------------------
"Why not the best?"
Jimmy Carter
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
Thanks for your replies, keep them coming.
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
But I think think you want to decrease the turns by 50/60 in order to keep the flux density the same.
And increase the wire area by 20% would keep the slots full and give roughly 20% increase in steady state horsepower rating. Your load will be drawing more at 20% higher speed as mentioned.
Also you may want to understand why it failed the first time.
If failed in very short period of time, may have stalled during start due to insufficient torque from lower flux density.
If failed after a few hours running, may not have been able to supply the higher power demanded by the load at 20% overspeed.
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
Bill
--------------------
"Why not the best?"
Jimmy Carter
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
This is a constant torque change to the motor. Since the motor will produce the same torque, the HP (kW) output will increase by 120%. However, for a pump, the power required for a speed increase is the cube of the speed increase. In this case, the pump running at a 60hz speed will require 172% of the power needed at the 50hz speed. This is why the pump motor winding burned up.
I do not know if reducing the output pressure with a regulator will reduce the power required by the pump. For industrial applications, the diameter of the pump impellor is usually reduced to compensate for an increase in speed. In this case, the impellor diameter would be reduced to 83.3% (83.3333...repeating decimal) of the original diameter to compensate for the increased speed.
With all of this in mind and considering the relatively small size of this pump, wouldn't it be easier and more cost effective to simply purchase a replacement 60hz pump?
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
Here is a proof.
V = T*dPhi/dt where T is turns
V = T*(B*A)*(2*pi*f) [assuming all items expressed on peak basis]
Solve for B
B = V / (T*A*2*pi*f)
To keep B constant, the product of T*f must be constant.
T1*f1 = T2*f2
Sounds backwards to me.
F1 = 50
F2 = 60
T2 = T1 * 50/60
We need to decrease the number of turns.
Correct?
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
Also I have a curiosity - original winding is concentric.
Will it be rewound as concentric or lap?
I'd think lap.
I've never seen anyone do a concentric rewind, but it seems to me that would be a real P.I.T.A. Maybe OP or Ray can comment.
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
Also I have a curiosity - original winding is concentric.
Will it be rewound as concentric or lap?
I'd think lap.
I've never seen anyone do a concentric rewind, but it seems to me that would be a real P.I.T.A. Maybe OP or Ray can comment.
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
You are correct, the turns are decreased by a factor of 50/60 (0.83) and wire size is increased by a factor of 60/50 (1.2). I obviously had the F1 and F2 mixed up when I posted that the turns would be increased. I'm glad you caught that mistake.
In any case, my concern is that the increased pump speed will require a 72% increase in power and the motor redesign only offers a 20% increase in power. The motor will be overloaded unless you can compensate for this by reducing the pump power requirement.
So, I guess the question at hand is whether the output pressure regulator will be able to compensate for this by reducing the pump power enough to allow the motor to operate without overloading.
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
My suggestion would be somewhat different.
- Reduce the number of turns:
new turns = 0.91 * old turns.
Increase the cross-sectional area of the turn at the same ratio. Increasing the cross-sectional area of the turn will not increase the power. This will reduce the motor heating and increase the life expectancy. Power will be the same.
BTW, you need to know that these motor-windings are significantly over sized (high power from very small core) and they have high FLA and no-load amps.
- Also, you need to calculate the new peripheral speed of the rotor ( need outer rotor diameter ).
- If the motor has a start capacitor, then a redesign is bit more complicated.
- If there is a possibility to use three-phase electricity, the best solution is recalculate to three-phase winding.
More about motor rewinding and redesign is here.
Zlatkodo
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
Can you explain how you arrived at the number 0.91 instead 5/6 = 0.83 ?
Won't 0.91 still result in potentially high flux density?
I assume you are saying the same thing we did, just in different terms. Obviously the load determines the steady state power, not the motor. Increased cross section gives increases current handling capability at a given temperature or decreases the temperature at a given current. Those two descriptions seem interchangeable to me (excluding assumptions about how the starting and breakdown are expressed as multiple of the running rated torque).
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
Bill
--------------------
"Why not the best?"
Jimmy Carter
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
For now I will just buy a small washer while experimenting in this karcher motor. My plan is to rewound it following your comment to increase the wire size and reduce the no. of turns and see what will happen.
Waross - yes it a positive displacement pump (3 axial-piston wobble plate pump) as what SkottyUK said.
Again thanks and more power to all.
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
Rhatcher - if the pressure regulator is not enough to compensate the pressure that will be produce due to the 20% increase in rpm, I'm planning to increase the hole of the nozzle by 20%? thus to release or balance the produced pressure.
What happened with this was, we were cleaning the coils of the train air-conditioning unit, this washer is brand new and after around 1 hour of use the winding was burnt. Magnet wires from the running coils (from 3 slot) surfaces from the slots and touch the revolving rotor and end up grounded. My plan now is to eliminate the overheating by redoing the windings (increase wire size and reduce coil turns)
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
For pd pump with 20% increased speed, your flow Q has gone up by 20%
Q2 = 1.2 * Q1
Let’s say the nozzle dominates the system pressure drop and nozzle DP is given by
DP~Q^2 / r^2 where Q is volume flow rate and r is radius of the hole
[we’ll focus on fluid power and neglect effects of efficiency which are harder to know]
Fluid power is given by
P = Q*DP = Q*Q^2 / r^2 = Q^3 / r^2
The change in power is estimated as
P2/P1 = (Q2/Q1)^3 / (r2/r1)^2
Using Q2/Q1 = 1.2 for pd pump at 20% higher speed:
P2/P1 = (1.2)^3 / r^2 = 1.73 / r^2
If you wanted P2/P1 = 1.2 (since you have uprated motor by approx 1.2), then
P2/P1 = 1.2 = 1.2^3 / r^2
1 =1.2^2 / r^2
r = 1.2
That tends to confirms your approach to increase hole size by 20%. If original motor was operating at appropriate margin to it’s rated power with original hole size, then rewound motor would be the same margin from it’s re-rated power with the new hole size.
We could also estimate the nozzle exit velocity using this hole size from V ~Q/r^2
V2/V1 = [Q2/Q1] / [r2/r1]^2 = 1.2 / 1.2^2 = 1/1.2 = 83%
(you will not have as strong a spray)
According to the thought process of zlatkodo, the original motor was already marginal and you may want to add back some margin rather than basing everything off the assumption that original conditions were properly designed. To add margin to magnetic saturation, make turns higher than 0.8 of original and motor not uprated so much, so P2/P1<1.2 you’d have to increase your hole size some more and get an even lower velocity than the 83% estimated above. Even if you kept turns at 0.8 but still wanted to add some more margin based on I^2^R heating you’d still increase hole size more and again end up lower velocity than estimated above. The calculations have simplifying assumptions and are not as useful as trying it out of course.
ok, I guess you just drew it as concentric because it was easier to draw that way?
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
Also I don't claim the calculation to be particularly accurate (I know there are more sophisticated models of orifices and nozzles available).
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
Trying to remove the old coils.....
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
My experience is with centrifugal pumps, not PD pumps. But, it is my understanding that a PD pump has a constant torque speed-torque curve. Thus, a 20% increase in speed only requires a 20% increase in power. If this is true, then the redesigned motor will provide the necessary power to drive the pump at the new speed without modifications. However, I am not certain of this so, maybe this is something that should be confirmed in the pump forum.
I understand zlatkodo's reasoning but I do not agree with it. First, it is based on the assumption that this motor's design is marginal. Without calculating the core flux densities, there is no way to know for certain if the flux densities are higher than normal. Next, and more importantly, if we are to assume that this manufacturer is squeezing every once of power out of the motor core that is possible, wouldn't it follow that all of this power is needed to operate the pump. Otherwise, why push the motor to the limit? Finally, this implies that if we reduce the motor power on the presumption that it will increase the motor life, then a modification to the pump would be required to reduce it's power consumption.
Reducing the pumps power requirement would reduce the pump's performance, perhaps to an unacceptable degree. For example, in this case we are looking at a pressure washer pump. The orifice may have a particular shape to achieve a desired spray pattern and it is certainly sized to produce a certain flow/pressure characterisic. If you change the orifice's characterisitics, the pressure washer's performance will be affected. Of course, I am not sure that changing the orifice size (or changing the pressure on the regulator) will reduce the PD pump power requirement. Perhaps this is another question that should be answered by the experts in the pump forum. In any case, reducing the motor performance and then reducing the pump performance to match is not something that I would endorse since I'm pretty sure that the outcome would be less than desirable.
On a subject that I am more experienced with, the winding diagram that is presented clearly shows a concentric winding. This is defined by the fact that the coils for each pole have different spans and are laid in with a common center. A lap winding will have all coils of the same span and the windings are said to be distributed because the coils for each pole do not have a common center. That being said, I'm not sure that I have ever seen a lap wound single phase winding.
Richard888's confusion may be because the original winding was installed as a lapped-concentric. For a lapped-concentric winding, the coils for both windings are laid in lap style at the same time, one coil side at a time, moving from left to right or right to left. When viewed from the end, it appears similar to a single layered lap winding instead of the two layers seen in a conventional concentric winding. But, the fact that the coils have different spans with a common center still defines a lapped-concentric as being a concentric winding.
Pete,
As I said above, I don't know if I've ever seen a lap wound single phase motor and I have never thought about redesigning a concentric single phase winding to a lap winding. My first thought is that I do not think that the lap winding redesign would be possible. My second thought is that it may be possible but it may also be more difficult than a sticking with the concentric winding. It is certain that you would still need a two layered winding, one start and one run.
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
The volume FLOW rate Q increases according to speed (as I had stated). That much should be obvious thinking about the way a piston pump works.
The Fluid Horsepower or Brake Horsepower is given by
BHP = DP*Q
(That should not be a point for dispute. Electrical types may think of that as similar to P = I*E)
We cannot predict change in BHP with speed without knowing something about the system that the pump is attached to (as assumption about DP vs Q characteristics).
The only way to get BHP increasing by 20% when Q increases by 20% for a fixed system as you suggested would be if DP does not change with Q. I hope you'll agree that cannot be correct (would you expect resistor voltage to stay constant when we increase the current?).
You earlier made a statement that you expected P to go up by 1.2^3 for a fixed fluid system when you thought it was a centrifugal pump. To make such a statement requires an ASSUMPTION about the fluid system to which you connect the pump. The particular unstated assumption required is that the fluid system obey DP~Q^2. (Think about it, you cannot obey Q~N, DP~N^2 and P=DP*Q ~ N^3 without also satisfying DP~Q^2).
If we make the same ASSUMPTION for the pd pump, we would come up with the same conclusion. i.e. if we increase pd pump speed by 1.2 when connected to a fixed system which is ASSUMED to obey DP~Q^2, then the power must go up by
P~Q*DP
P~N*N^2
P~N^3
QED. All we needed to get there was to start with was Q~N which is true for PD pump and add an assumption about the system which we chose to be DP~Q^2.
The assumption DP~Q^2 system characteristic happens to be true for closed loop systems whose pressure drop is dominated by head loss from turbulent (vs laminar) flow. When you get into other flow regimes (laminar) it does not apply. When you have open loop system like pressure washer, with possible differences in elevation and velocity at entrance and exit, also does not strictly apply. With more info about orficie and entrance and exit conditions we could do better, but DP~Q^2 is a start and a traditional one at that.
Your reaction might be: "but wait Pete, those relationships P~Q, DP~N^2, P~N^3 are called "centrifugal pump laws" and so do not apply to PD pumps". It is true but in a different context. . When you ask a fluids guy what those relationships mean, he will tell you that they are NOT intended for predicting change of individual operating points with speed without knowledge of connected system (that would be folly.... operating point is intersection of pump curve and system curve and we CANNOT determine it without knowing or assuming something about the system curve). What those relationships are intended for is to map an entire pump curve from one speed to another. That particular mapping process applies to centrifugal pumps and not to pd pumps whose ideal curve is much simpler: a vertical line on DP vs flow graph.
In summary DP~Q^2 is an assumption. It is not perfect and could certainly be refined for orifices and entrance/exit conditions with more info. If we are going to predict change in BHP with change in speed for either type of pump (centrifugal or pd), we need info or assumption about the system. For both type pumps, we can predict BHP~N^3 if and only if we assume the pump is connected to a system which obeys DP~Q^2
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
PD pump can be considered as a constant torque pump in some cases.
Which cases depend on the system that the pump is connected to.
As an example let's say I'm pumping between two large reservoirs at different elevations using a large diameter pipe.
The reservoirs are so large that their leve is considered constant.
The pipe is so large that the head loss is negligible.
The system pressures are set by elevation and unaffected by flow.
Then DP would be constant.
As we vary speed, BHP would change according to BHP~DP*Q
Since the problem assures DP is constant, and we already know Q~N, then we have
BHP~N
The constant proportionality constant is of course torque. i.e. constant torque in this particular application.
What made it work that way was constant DP as we changed flow. Reasonable for some systems, but probably not reasonable when forcing flow through a nozzle.
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
Bill
--------------------
"Why not the best?"
Jimmy Carter
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
This pump has an internal pressure relief valve and an output pressure regulator, both located upstream of the discharge orifice. What would the system curve for this look like?
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
Pump efficiency changes are unknown in these scenarios, just focusing on fluid power.
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
I am pretty sure it is just a crude regulator valve dumping back to the suction side. These little pumps don't have the sophistication found on a large industrial hydraulic pump. Maybe on the larger ones they do, but this one is either the top of the domestic range or bottom of the light commercial range where purchase cost get far more attention than operating cost.
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
Here are some picture of the pump;
New Skil (domestic series) as temporary replacement and Karcher (its a professional series
here is the pump showing the regulator knob
Pump piston
The user manual of the karcher states;
"Overflow valve with pressure switch - While reducing the water supply/quantity regulation at the pump head, the overflow valve opens and part of the water flows back to the pump suck side.
If the lever on the trigger gun is released the pressure switch turns off the pump, the high pressure jet stopped. If the lever is pulled the pump is turn on again."
My option to revise the orifice in the nozzle is not possible because the nozzle is different it has 3 orifices (with different profiles). Hope that the excess 20% rpm can be dissipated by the overflow valve. I really need to fast track this work so that we can see what will happen.
Thanks again.
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
Have you checked ebay?
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz
Do you have a part number so I can compare to a British / European model? The motor looks very like one I scrapped last year. Repairing these things is a little sideline I dabble in now and then. I can see why you would like to get it repaired if it cost that much.
RE: Rewinding a Motor from 50Hz to 60Hz