mash98
Electrical
- Jul 17, 2008
- 56
We have a bar rolling mill where a dc motor of following specs is being used while the drive for the same is Mentor II (M1850).
General Electric
Direct current motor
No. 2321820
Type MCF
HP 1250
RPM 500/910
Form_______
Volt 600
Amp 1632
Exc Volt 250
Wound______
Commutator 55OC
Insulation winding and Armature core 40OC
Bare copper winding 50OC
Shunt Field 50OC
Below 625 RPM
Ventilating Air 7000 CFM
CAUTION: Before insulating or operating read instructions GEH-709
Schenectacly NY MAde in USA
The motor and drive were installed and commissioned around 15 years ago and the same were working fine for many years as long as we were rolling flat bar.But recently we changed the sizes and shape of our product and this new product application needs more torque and due to the same we are recently having frequent overload tripping.The above Mentor II drive's rated current is 1850 amperes and it is a single quadrant drive.On analysis of the drive parameters I figured out more torque can be safely produce from this motor as the field was set to below its rated value that is on 200 volts while the rated field is 250 volts.The drive is also controlling the motor field according to the load requirements.Usually we run our application on above base speed that is around 800 RPM where the motor field further decrease around 170 volts or so and when it needs more torque it increases the field voltage up to 200 volts.So I changed the motor field voltage from 200 to 250 volts i.e on its rated value which sure improved the previous condition but still more power was required for the application.Then there were two other parameters OVERLOAD I*t and CURRENT LIMIT were set to 1400 amperes and 1632 amperes respectively.So, I increased the OVERLOAD current to 1632 amperes and the current limit to 2000 amperes but my LT supply system could not support to these increase values and it started tripping from the system.And as it could not support these new values I had to decrease the current Limit to 1650 amperes.They above changes has sure improved the rolling conditions but still we face limited torque issues as the current limit can not be increased due to system's limitations although the current limit function working fine.
The duty cycle of the application is not more than 60% at any condition.As we usually run our motor more than its base speed so can we increase the motor field voltage to around 10-15 percent of it rated value so the motor can produced more torque by compromising speed on these brief instances without overloading our LT system? Can somebody also guide me about the motor field voltage tolerance for such motors as I could not get it from GE Motors or anywhere on the net.
Regards
General Electric
Direct current motor
No. 2321820
Type MCF
HP 1250
RPM 500/910
Form_______
Volt 600
Amp 1632
Exc Volt 250
Wound______
Commutator 55OC
Insulation winding and Armature core 40OC
Bare copper winding 50OC
Shunt Field 50OC
Below 625 RPM
Ventilating Air 7000 CFM
CAUTION: Before insulating or operating read instructions GEH-709
Schenectacly NY MAde in USA
The motor and drive were installed and commissioned around 15 years ago and the same were working fine for many years as long as we were rolling flat bar.But recently we changed the sizes and shape of our product and this new product application needs more torque and due to the same we are recently having frequent overload tripping.The above Mentor II drive's rated current is 1850 amperes and it is a single quadrant drive.On analysis of the drive parameters I figured out more torque can be safely produce from this motor as the field was set to below its rated value that is on 200 volts while the rated field is 250 volts.The drive is also controlling the motor field according to the load requirements.Usually we run our application on above base speed that is around 800 RPM where the motor field further decrease around 170 volts or so and when it needs more torque it increases the field voltage up to 200 volts.So I changed the motor field voltage from 200 to 250 volts i.e on its rated value which sure improved the previous condition but still more power was required for the application.Then there were two other parameters OVERLOAD I*t and CURRENT LIMIT were set to 1400 amperes and 1632 amperes respectively.So, I increased the OVERLOAD current to 1632 amperes and the current limit to 2000 amperes but my LT supply system could not support to these increase values and it started tripping from the system.And as it could not support these new values I had to decrease the current Limit to 1650 amperes.They above changes has sure improved the rolling conditions but still we face limited torque issues as the current limit can not be increased due to system's limitations although the current limit function working fine.
The duty cycle of the application is not more than 60% at any condition.As we usually run our motor more than its base speed so can we increase the motor field voltage to around 10-15 percent of it rated value so the motor can produced more torque by compromising speed on these brief instances without overloading our LT system? Can somebody also guide me about the motor field voltage tolerance for such motors as I could not get it from GE Motors or anywhere on the net.
Regards