tr1ntx
Mechanical
- Jul 20, 2010
- 285
This may be a trivial question for you electrical types, but it's stuff I just don't know . . .
We have a customer, sort of an "All ya gotta do" type and not as clever as he thinks he is, who knows how to pull the strings of my boss (the dolt). He wants us to design / piece together a system with solar recharged batteries powering an air compressor (or set of compressors).
The equivalent single AC-powered compressor would be 10HP, 230V 3-phase, 24 Amp. The supplied air would be 100 psi, so the tank pressure would be 175 I suppose. 20 cfm rate required for 20-30 seconds. The good news is that it would only run intermittently, 4 times per day, maybe 5. We can install a lot of storage capacity and pre-charge the system, so it generally wouldn't need to fill from zero using battery power. This is a piece of mobile equipment, on site for maybe 2 weeks.
The scheme is to have 3 or 4 separate compressors. There can be manual valves accessing various fully-charged storage vessels.
My thought is that 3 or 4 DC motors "summed" to get the equivalent output of the above AC-powered unit would require much more current. Is that right, AC 3-phase delivers much more power for a given Voltage and Current?
Secondly, and actually over-riding the above issue, my thought is that compressing air to 175 psi into 60 gallon tanks requires much too large a current draw for a "transportable" battery bank. It's simply too much work being done in a short period of time, even if you're only recharging from 125 psi kick-in pressure. The battery bank would be quite large to move around, right? Getting that amount of work from solar-generated DC electricity 4 times a day would be a significant feat, wouldn't it? Not to mention 24 hrs/day and handling 3 rainy days in a row or something. That's out of the question I believe.
We currently have one 12V 8D battery on the unit, with a 12W solar charger. He's thinking the compressors can be powered with several larger panels and 3-4 more batteries. I'm thinking he's greatly underestimating the power from 230V 3-phase electricity and the current draw required to compress air.
Any insight?
We have a customer, sort of an "All ya gotta do" type and not as clever as he thinks he is, who knows how to pull the strings of my boss (the dolt). He wants us to design / piece together a system with solar recharged batteries powering an air compressor (or set of compressors).
The equivalent single AC-powered compressor would be 10HP, 230V 3-phase, 24 Amp. The supplied air would be 100 psi, so the tank pressure would be 175 I suppose. 20 cfm rate required for 20-30 seconds. The good news is that it would only run intermittently, 4 times per day, maybe 5. We can install a lot of storage capacity and pre-charge the system, so it generally wouldn't need to fill from zero using battery power. This is a piece of mobile equipment, on site for maybe 2 weeks.
The scheme is to have 3 or 4 separate compressors. There can be manual valves accessing various fully-charged storage vessels.
My thought is that 3 or 4 DC motors "summed" to get the equivalent output of the above AC-powered unit would require much more current. Is that right, AC 3-phase delivers much more power for a given Voltage and Current?
Secondly, and actually over-riding the above issue, my thought is that compressing air to 175 psi into 60 gallon tanks requires much too large a current draw for a "transportable" battery bank. It's simply too much work being done in a short period of time, even if you're only recharging from 125 psi kick-in pressure. The battery bank would be quite large to move around, right? Getting that amount of work from solar-generated DC electricity 4 times a day would be a significant feat, wouldn't it? Not to mention 24 hrs/day and handling 3 rainy days in a row or something. That's out of the question I believe.
We currently have one 12V 8D battery on the unit, with a 12W solar charger. He's thinking the compressors can be powered with several larger panels and 3-4 more batteries. I'm thinking he's greatly underestimating the power from 230V 3-phase electricity and the current draw required to compress air.
Any insight?