GaPwr
Electrical
- Jul 30, 2014
- 4
I read the information Below from DougMSOE color #EF2929]25 Jan 04 0:58 thread[/color] from a previous thread and it looks like what i am seeing on a motor that I have spent 100's of hours testing. This motor is Delta connected, has 180 coils,60 groups, 20 in each phase, so i agree it is not testing the whole circuit i have tested each indvidual coil, each group, and each phase,i have reconfigured to a WYE and tested that way too. now what i am seeing is when I surge(call 1-2,2-3,3-1)phase 1-2 on 2-3 and ground 3-1 it shows good when I surge 1-2 and 3-1 ground 2-3 it shows bad. and when i surge 2-3 and 3-1 ground 1-2 it shows bad. now wht i am seeing is a wiggle with one surge tester Baker ST115 and basicly the same thing with my Baker D12000 but just spread out more. is this a normal attribute I will find in a delta connected motor or is there something not connected correctly also i have tested two other DELTA motors got the same surge results. but my thoughts were were that we wound those motors so we could have done it wrong can any one explain the relationship between the surge test and a delta connected motor.
also i have ran one of these motors and the RPM is below slip and synchronous. could this cause it ???????????????????????????????????
25 Jan 04 0:58
DougMSOE
Usually, a surge tester comparies one coil to the other, at least the Baker and PJ electronics equipment does. The surge testers that I have used have a common lead that is the "neutral" for both coils. The other 2 leads go to the other ends of their respective coils. BUT, with a delta winding you need to disconnect all of the coils. Otherwise you will get a cross feed from the coil "not under test". This will destroy the test results.
One more point, if you are doing this test to a machine that has already been wound you are wasting your time as the nature of the iron core will allow the surge to go about 2 turns around the coil before the 'surge' has been attenuated to an extent that the volts /turn is less than the actual line voltage. Take a look at any book on surge attenuation.