OhOh Scotty, methinks you are refering to energy savings with variable frequency drives. This thread is about "energy savers" which do not vary the speed output, just the voltage. I just needed to make that clear for the newbies.
RE: Harry Dampers comment about why other major mfgrs don't push this. We did. In 1973 when President Carter's administration was passing out government rebate checks for anything that had the words "energy, savings and/or reduction" in the sales literature. The reality caught up with us later when the customers found out that unless their applicatoion was EXACTLY the same as the benchmark ap, the results were disappointing. My company decided 8 years ago to quit including it in our soft starters. It caused more dissapointment and ill will than it was worth. I think you are correct too in your statement about Rockwell having it in there just to keep themselves in the running when it shows up in a specification. I keep getting bumped out of project submittals because we don't have it and they do. In 99% of those applications, the same engineer specifies a bypass contactor as well, rederring the energy saver useless altogether! There is no limit to the depth which ignorance will drag some people.
RE: the OP's request for real applications. I used to be a Systems Integrator and applied many of them during those Carter years. I had success with only 2 applications: bowling pin resetters and a severelly oversized well pump. The bowling pin resetters run all day disengaged from the load by a clutch. When the pins get knocked down, the clutch engages for about 30 seconds and couples the load to the motor. The extreme unloaded time actually made it come out to be a true cost recovery device. Those are 1 phase by the way. The pumps were in Alaska and belonged to the Alaska Area Native Health Dept. Since the maintenance crews had to drive service trucks for days to get to villages, they only wanted to carry one well pump with them and use it at every site regardless of needed capacity; universal parts replacement etc. etc. In some villages, 30HP was adequate, but in others, 5HP would have sufficed. When they put the 30HP in a site that could only use 5HP, they trimmed the impeller and put on an energy saver to help reduce fuel consumption by the deisel gensets. I heard they eventually abandoned the program as too complicated. We tried them on wood chippers, turbine pumps, air compressors, vent fans, vacuum pumps etc. etc. etc. In all the rest of the applications the only benefits came from soft starting.
I could go on ad-nauseum (and perhapse have). These albatrosses have enjoyed a resurgence due to the internet. I hope it doesn't further damage the public's response to legitimate benefits of soft starters.
Quando Omni Flunkus Moritati