KatyDave
Electrical
- May 1, 2005
- 11
Hello:
I have an application where there is a 40 HP submersible pump that is properly installed for cooling flow. The pump is used to pump water from a lake up to a reservoir. The induction motor is a 2-pole Franklin Electric, 575 Volt, 3-phase. The motor is rated at 42.8 FLA with a service factor of 1.15. It is driven by a FVNR starter with class 10 overloads.
The service voltage at the site varies between 615 to 627 volts. In Canada we have a 600 volt service which the utility must assure falls within +5/-10 %. When commissioned I noted that that the running current was about 47 amps. For this reason I connected a AEMC power pad and have the following:
PF: 66%
kW: 33 kW (44.2 HP)
kVAR: 37.5 kVAR
kVA: 50 kVA
I was told by Franklin that the motor is being driven into saturation by the high voltage, resulting in a poor power factor. Can someone explain this? I have never seen such a low power factor for a motor operating in the service factor. What was also interesting is that in the trend the kVAR followed the service voltage while the kW remained relatively constant.
I do not like the operating conditions on this pump and I am recommending that the client use VFDs. Opinions, suggestions?
Thanks.
I have an application where there is a 40 HP submersible pump that is properly installed for cooling flow. The pump is used to pump water from a lake up to a reservoir. The induction motor is a 2-pole Franklin Electric, 575 Volt, 3-phase. The motor is rated at 42.8 FLA with a service factor of 1.15. It is driven by a FVNR starter with class 10 overloads.
The service voltage at the site varies between 615 to 627 volts. In Canada we have a 600 volt service which the utility must assure falls within +5/-10 %. When commissioned I noted that that the running current was about 47 amps. For this reason I connected a AEMC power pad and have the following:
PF: 66%
kW: 33 kW (44.2 HP)
kVAR: 37.5 kVAR
kVA: 50 kVA
I was told by Franklin that the motor is being driven into saturation by the high voltage, resulting in a poor power factor. Can someone explain this? I have never seen such a low power factor for a motor operating in the service factor. What was also interesting is that in the trend the kVAR followed the service voltage while the kW remained relatively constant.
I do not like the operating conditions on this pump and I am recommending that the client use VFDs. Opinions, suggestions?
Thanks.