matthew109
Electrical
- Nov 26, 2013
- 1
Hello, I have 2 queries of 2 parts of our machine we are looking at redesigning from currently hydraulic to electric.
freewheeling - we are considering replacing our hydraulic motor with a Variable Speed Drive connected to an electric motor (400VAC) for example a 12.5kW 3 phase 4 pole aluminum framed motor, this would have closed loop control to maintain a speed. When the system is shutdown and the power is turned off to the motor, as the motor is connected to the shaft of a large rotor, it would continue to freewheel for up to 30 minutes.
Would this cause a problem to the electric motor with the motor continuing to spin without power applied to it?
Second query is overdriving an electric servo motor,
We have a hydraulic motor connected to a turntable that rotates it 90 degrees in either direction every few seconds. The environment causes this turntable to move as well so we also have an independent auxiliary hydraulic brake circuit connected to this same turntable that does braking and reduces its maximum velocity when required. This brake circuit has an inline cooler that takes the heat out of the braking system. We are looking at replacing the hydraulic motor with an electric servo drive and retaining the hydraulic auxiliary braking circuit (as we have a kW of braking and heat generated that we can easy remove with our oil to water cooler).
My query is if we don’t what this electronic servo drive to do any braking, when it is being over-driven, can a servo drive cope with this condition and what would be the best way to minimise the heat generated from the electric servo drive and leave that to the auxiliary brake circuit?
Appreciate any help or comments.
freewheeling - we are considering replacing our hydraulic motor with a Variable Speed Drive connected to an electric motor (400VAC) for example a 12.5kW 3 phase 4 pole aluminum framed motor, this would have closed loop control to maintain a speed. When the system is shutdown and the power is turned off to the motor, as the motor is connected to the shaft of a large rotor, it would continue to freewheel for up to 30 minutes.
Would this cause a problem to the electric motor with the motor continuing to spin without power applied to it?
Second query is overdriving an electric servo motor,
We have a hydraulic motor connected to a turntable that rotates it 90 degrees in either direction every few seconds. The environment causes this turntable to move as well so we also have an independent auxiliary hydraulic brake circuit connected to this same turntable that does braking and reduces its maximum velocity when required. This brake circuit has an inline cooler that takes the heat out of the braking system. We are looking at replacing the hydraulic motor with an electric servo drive and retaining the hydraulic auxiliary braking circuit (as we have a kW of braking and heat generated that we can easy remove with our oil to water cooler).
My query is if we don’t what this electronic servo drive to do any braking, when it is being over-driven, can a servo drive cope with this condition and what would be the best way to minimise the heat generated from the electric servo drive and leave that to the auxiliary brake circuit?
Appreciate any help or comments.