bentov
Electrical
- Feb 2, 2004
- 74
At our motor repair shop we have 200a 240V 3 phase service equipment, but because our actual operating loads are low the utility supplies us with a whopping 45kva. We routinely rewind motors up to 500hp 480V. The problem is getting motors up to full speed/full voltage for no-load testing.
We have two existing test panels. One is an old 150hp 4 pole synchronous motor with redesigned rotor winding & gearmotor attached to output shaft, makes a continuously variable autotransformer good for 0-480V out with 240V in over a 1/4 turn (90 degree) rotation. It's really cool BUT can't supply enough current to start larger motors, especially older ones with heavy rotors. The other is a transformer/contactor setup using a couple of 75kva transformers I found, voltages available are 60, 120, 240, 480. That does start the big ones (takes 800a at 60V sometimes for old motors with heavy rotors). So we can get them up to speed, but still limited on full voltage test running; depending on details we can get up to around 250hp at 480V - larger ones generally trip the 200a main breaker at our service entrance. The problem is the setup is necessarily open transition - closing the contacts at full voltage of course is a big current spike we just can't handle (though the rotor is at full speed, inrush is a function of winding impedance/rotor reactance at applied voltage - big is big).
I'm thinking about a third setup, a 480V VFD that can handle the rotor inertia acceleration without all that current, get us all the way up to full speed/full voltage. For proper testing though (vibration, etc.) we should run without a VFD, so my question (finally!): what happens if we have a motor running full speed, turn off the VFD, then re-energize with a soft starter while still spinning close to full speed? Especially when the motor is quite a bit larger than the soft start (like a 500hp motor running no load with a 150hp soft start)?
We have two existing test panels. One is an old 150hp 4 pole synchronous motor with redesigned rotor winding & gearmotor attached to output shaft, makes a continuously variable autotransformer good for 0-480V out with 240V in over a 1/4 turn (90 degree) rotation. It's really cool BUT can't supply enough current to start larger motors, especially older ones with heavy rotors. The other is a transformer/contactor setup using a couple of 75kva transformers I found, voltages available are 60, 120, 240, 480. That does start the big ones (takes 800a at 60V sometimes for old motors with heavy rotors). So we can get them up to speed, but still limited on full voltage test running; depending on details we can get up to around 250hp at 480V - larger ones generally trip the 200a main breaker at our service entrance. The problem is the setup is necessarily open transition - closing the contacts at full voltage of course is a big current spike we just can't handle (though the rotor is at full speed, inrush is a function of winding impedance/rotor reactance at applied voltage - big is big).
I'm thinking about a third setup, a 480V VFD that can handle the rotor inertia acceleration without all that current, get us all the way up to full speed/full voltage. For proper testing though (vibration, etc.) we should run without a VFD, so my question (finally!): what happens if we have a motor running full speed, turn off the VFD, then re-energize with a soft starter while still spinning close to full speed? Especially when the motor is quite a bit larger than the soft start (like a 500hp motor running no load with a 150hp soft start)?