MotoGP
Marine/Ocean
- Jul 14, 2003
- 23
Seasons' Greetings to all Electrical Gurus:
I am presently employed by a mining company that owns one specialized piece of equipment known as an "agglomerator" which, in appearance, appears to be two large diameter cylinders that rotate about their respective axis in opposite directions.
The cylinders' opposing direction of rotation is a design requirement.
The two (2) drivers are both 3-phase, 4160 V, 500 h.p., 1800 r.p.m. motors; one is configured to turn CW and the other CCW.
During some asinine installation "misadventures", where in the past CW-rotating motors have been installed in the required CCW-rotating position, I have been informed that the panic move was to send the motor(s) to one of the plant shops, where the stator was somehow configured to influence the "transformation" between CW and CCW rotation such that it was later installed with the desired result...sort of.
(1) Perhaps it is only some "tribal knowledge" that I picked up somewhere, nonetheless I thought that to perform this sort of hijinx results in, among other problems, an unwanted appearance of destructive eddy currents. Please let me know if this notion is correct, and, if so, what this should mean to me from a technical standpoint.
(2) Would any electric motors exist, with the parameters that I have described above, such that there is a "safe-and-correct" (and relatively simple way) to influence the 3-phase motor to turn in either of the CW or CCW directions while maintaining an absence of unwanted eddy currents?
Very simple questions for the likes of those reading this enquiry, I'm sure. Puzzles the heck out of me though!
Thanks for your time and consideration...Happy Holidays!
I am presently employed by a mining company that owns one specialized piece of equipment known as an "agglomerator" which, in appearance, appears to be two large diameter cylinders that rotate about their respective axis in opposite directions.
The cylinders' opposing direction of rotation is a design requirement.
The two (2) drivers are both 3-phase, 4160 V, 500 h.p., 1800 r.p.m. motors; one is configured to turn CW and the other CCW.
During some asinine installation "misadventures", where in the past CW-rotating motors have been installed in the required CCW-rotating position, I have been informed that the panic move was to send the motor(s) to one of the plant shops, where the stator was somehow configured to influence the "transformation" between CW and CCW rotation such that it was later installed with the desired result...sort of.
(1) Perhaps it is only some "tribal knowledge" that I picked up somewhere, nonetheless I thought that to perform this sort of hijinx results in, among other problems, an unwanted appearance of destructive eddy currents. Please let me know if this notion is correct, and, if so, what this should mean to me from a technical standpoint.
(2) Would any electric motors exist, with the parameters that I have described above, such that there is a "safe-and-correct" (and relatively simple way) to influence the 3-phase motor to turn in either of the CW or CCW directions while maintaining an absence of unwanted eddy currents?
Very simple questions for the likes of those reading this enquiry, I'm sure. Puzzles the heck out of me though!
Thanks for your time and consideration...Happy Holidays!