John McNutt said:
What about them does not play well together? Are the soft start manufacturers making junk that will be problematic in the long run?
Remember, we are talking about SINGLE PHASE motors here. Soft starters work great on 3 phase motors, but lets put that aside.
On a single phase Capacitor Start motor, there is a centrifugal switch that, at rest, is closed, so that the Start capacitor is in the circuit, then it opens and removed the cap at about 80% speed. When you energize that with a Soft Starter, the capacitor charging current, which takes place instantly at the available current level, looks like a short circuit to the SCRs in the Soft Starter, which puts a type of stress called "dI/dt" (D= delta or change, I = current, t = time), so a rapid rate of rise in current. That type of stress is something that SCRs can only handle for a little while before the silicon layers inside begin to fuse, meaning the SCR shorts and can no longer be controlled; it becomes a full time conductor. At the same time, the harmonics created by the SCR phase angle firing, the so-called "chopping" of the sine wave, creates a LOT of harmonics on the circuit. Because this only lasts for the time it takes to accelerate the motor, harmonics from soft starters in 3 phase motors are not a big concern in general. But in THIS CASE (SINGLE phase cap start motor), because the starting capacitor is in the circuit during this time it will absorb those harmonics, like a trap filter, and heat up. Then because the PURPOSE of the soft starter is to EXTEND the acceleration time, the capacitor is in the circuit for LONGER than it was designed to be and eventually the capacitor swells, leaks it's electrolyte, and fails.
They work fine for PSC motors because the capacitor is not an electrolytic and the capacitance is significantly lower, so there is less stress on the SCRs
Those Stellar soft starters are brand-labeled Siemens, or at least they are both buying them from the same Chinese source. I see that they claim they are for use on CS/CR motors, but you can't change physics. The reason why most of the major players in the soft start business don't make single phase soft starters is because they used to and have been burned by multiple failures, or they were smart enough to avoid that pitfall. I cant speak as to why AutomationDestruct has decided to give it a try again, maybe they still have to learn...
" We are all here on earth to help others; what on earth the others are here for I don't know." -- W. H. Auden