Oh great gurus...
I have been asked to do a comparison between keeping an old (c. 1988) 250HP 460V Relcon VFD which uses GTOs, and installing a new PWM drive in its place. The utility has indicated that they will contribute to the event IF they are shown that there will be at least a 10% improvement in efficiency. I am assuming they mean throughput efficiency, and although the old Relcon drive currently shows a displacement PF of .65, apparently they do NOT care! I am well versed and capable of describing all of the other benefits to the user, but efficiency is unfortunately the only concern of the Utility.
The question I have for you is this: years ago when we were retrofitting older 6-step and current source VFDs with PWM designs on a regular basis, there were several reputable studies available which showed the benefits of doing so, including the improved throughput efficiency. Since I have not been asked this question in probably 10+ years, I no longer have access to any of those papers. Does anyone else have one floating around or can offer some advice (other than a Google or Thomas Register search) in finding one? It would be greatly appreciated.
"Venditori de oleum-vipera non vigere excordis populi"
I have been asked to do a comparison between keeping an old (c. 1988) 250HP 460V Relcon VFD which uses GTOs, and installing a new PWM drive in its place. The utility has indicated that they will contribute to the event IF they are shown that there will be at least a 10% improvement in efficiency. I am assuming they mean throughput efficiency, and although the old Relcon drive currently shows a displacement PF of .65, apparently they do NOT care! I am well versed and capable of describing all of the other benefits to the user, but efficiency is unfortunately the only concern of the Utility.
The question I have for you is this: years ago when we were retrofitting older 6-step and current source VFDs with PWM designs on a regular basis, there were several reputable studies available which showed the benefits of doing so, including the improved throughput efficiency. Since I have not been asked this question in probably 10+ years, I no longer have access to any of those papers. Does anyone else have one floating around or can offer some advice (other than a Google or Thomas Register search) in finding one? It would be greatly appreciated.
"Venditori de oleum-vipera non vigere excordis populi"