Gyo
Mechanical
- Nov 11, 2010
- 31
Hi. I am a new starter with a company which manufactures water-filled motors. There was an incident on a 6kV motor 400kW 2960rpm motor driving a centrifugal pump. It was summarised that the impeller damaged to the extent of fully worn out. As a result, the rotor shaft became unstable and caused damage to the bearings.
There was only thermal trip and starting current protection system for that motor installed by the client. As a result of the lack of protection system, the client decided to
My opinion is that the damage to the bearing can be prevented by adding a simple overload current protection. Since worn out impeller causes higher motor current above the allowable limit, the overload trip can be activated to switch off the motor to prevent another set of failure. Thermal protection does not effectively protect the motor as there is a lag before the thermal limit is reached, therefore allowing the motor to run abnormally for an extended period of time until it tripped on thermal overloading.
What is your experience on this?
There was only thermal trip and starting current protection system for that motor installed by the client. As a result of the lack of protection system, the client decided to
My opinion is that the damage to the bearing can be prevented by adding a simple overload current protection. Since worn out impeller causes higher motor current above the allowable limit, the overload trip can be activated to switch off the motor to prevent another set of failure. Thermal protection does not effectively protect the motor as there is a lag before the thermal limit is reached, therefore allowing the motor to run abnormally for an extended period of time until it tripped on thermal overloading.
What is your experience on this?