Walden
Electrical
- May 4, 2003
- 46
I design and build electrical control panels for refrigeration systems. Very often the refrigeration compressor has a part wind start using two star connected, electrically separate windings. Each winding carries about 50% of the total running current of the compressor. One winding is energised and 1 second later, the second winding is energised. This system of starting a motor is, I believe, North American in origin and seems to have been used in Europe since the end of WW2. It appears to be used only for refrigeration compressors.
The vast majority of these motors and their starters work satisfactorily for years but there is a substantial minority of failures with the contactor tips welding together and the compressor winding being destroyed. Each winding has its own contactor and thermal overload relay and the motor as a whole is protected with HRC fuses or circuit breaker.
What appears to happen is that with a low current fault in one winding, the thermal overload operates and the contactor opens and draws an arc across the contactor tips. The arc melts the silver on the tips of the contactor and the tips become welded together. The faulty winding is now permanently connected to at least one phase of the mains supply by the welded contactor tip or tips and through the thermal overload relay: the winding is quickly destroyed and shorts out to earth. Only now do the protective fuses or MCBs “see” a large enough current to operate. But by the time they do, the contactor, the thermal overload relay and the compressor motor have all been destroyed.
Does anyone know of any research into these part wind starters?
Is the “good” winding generating a voltage in the faulty winding which enhances and maintains the arc I wonder?
Martin Pirrie.
The vast majority of these motors and their starters work satisfactorily for years but there is a substantial minority of failures with the contactor tips welding together and the compressor winding being destroyed. Each winding has its own contactor and thermal overload relay and the motor as a whole is protected with HRC fuses or circuit breaker.
What appears to happen is that with a low current fault in one winding, the thermal overload operates and the contactor opens and draws an arc across the contactor tips. The arc melts the silver on the tips of the contactor and the tips become welded together. The faulty winding is now permanently connected to at least one phase of the mains supply by the welded contactor tip or tips and through the thermal overload relay: the winding is quickly destroyed and shorts out to earth. Only now do the protective fuses or MCBs “see” a large enough current to operate. But by the time they do, the contactor, the thermal overload relay and the compressor motor have all been destroyed.
Does anyone know of any research into these part wind starters?
Is the “good” winding generating a voltage in the faulty winding which enhances and maintains the arc I wonder?
Martin Pirrie.