Assuming you realized your error in posting in the "other topics" forum and moved your question here (as it should be), I am re-posting my answer here and will red flag the cross post.
There are several issues here.
First off; will it work? Yes, it is done all the time. The critical thing here is that the motors must be exactly the same, as is make, model, slip %, everything. If not, one motor will drag the other.
Second; Can I use 2 soft starters? Yes, but there are additional complications. While I have made it work when someone before me has designed it with separate soft starters starting simultaneously, that is NOT the best approach. It is virtually impossible to achieve uniform current limit or ramp settings between them, so again, you end up with one motor dragging the other anyway. If this is the case, there was no point in using the second soft starter. Let me explain. If one motor is capable of accelerating the load by itself, as is usually the case with grinders by the way, you can use a soft starter on one motor, then bring the second motor on across-the-line after the load is at full speed. You will get only a brief (as in 1 or 2 cycles) inrush to magnetize the windings, but no appreciable starting current surge. I do this all the time with large rock crushers, works great and costs a lot less.
If one motor is incapable of accelerating the load by itself, then your 2 soft starter method is at risk to not work anyway. Whichever motor is allowed to have even a slight amount of voltage more than the other will attempt to bear the entire load and trip on overload. Sometimes the soft starter outputs can be close enough so that motor #2 can contribute some, but my experience is that is rare and likely a chance occurrence rather than an accuracy issue. So if you need more than 500HP to accelerate the load to full speed, use 1 soft starter big enough to start both motors. Then all you need is separate overload relays for each motor and you have a complete system.
JRaef.com
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