Pete: The waveforms were taken without filter and transformer.
Ah yes thanks - that explains why it wasn’t working! Lol.
A mildy interesting article here:
Interaction of drive modulation and cable parameters on AC motor transients
by Kerkman, R.J.; Leggate, D.; Skibinski, G.L.;
It addresses some of the things we have been talking about here:
1 -oscillation
2: reflection at > factor of 2 amplification
This author discusses oscilation on page 2 in a manner which I would say is very similar to what I described previously. They identify that the oscillating period of the cable corresponds to 4 times the cable length. The example figure is figure 1 where it can be seen tp is the travel time – first observed between inverter pulse and motor response….. then 4tp is the period of the resulting oscillation. Why does this frequency not hold for the waveforms posted in this thread? Beats me…. There’s got to be more to the story somewhere.
They discuss two possibilities for reflection magnitude > twice the inverter pulse
First: IV.A on page 5 discusses “double pulsing effect” which corresponds to the case of figure 3 (a few pages earlier) where the incoming pulse changes direction at the same time that the reflected negative wave hits the motor. In this case, we would expect to see the final voltage end up zero (due to short pulse), but in the waveforms posted in this thread it ends up at 310volt, so this double-pulsing phenomenon does not apply.
Second: IV.B on page 6 discusses “Polarity Reversal” – this is where the pulse doesn’t change to zero, but changes to an opposite polarity again at about the same timeframe when the first negative reflection hits the motor. There is no evidence of this behavior in the one inverter pulse that was zoomed in, so we might be inclined to discount this possibility. BUT, there are some interesting clues that this
might be occurring.
First clue: the data posted 14 May 11 4:47 in this thread on page 5/7 seems to show a very regular pattern of alternating magnitudes of the peaks at the motor: 800 / 620 / 800 / 620 / 780 / 620 / 760. It is a distinct enough pattern that we suspect it may not be coincidence (if it is just a characteristic of system reacting to the same pulse every time, we expect roughly the same result every time). So maybe there is some slight difference among pulses …. What difference in pulse can cause this…. Something like the oddball reversal of figure 9.
Second clue: This is probably a bigger clue. look at figure 9 of the linked paper and see there is an interesting feature that the waveform first goes in one direction and then reaches the high peak in the opposite direction. That feature is shared by all of the high peaks on page 5/7 and by none of the low peaks.
So, there is at least a few clues that this “polarity reversal” of the inverter pulse might possibly be going on. It doesn’t particularly show anything like that evident on page 2/7, although there are a few tiny positive peaks evident above zero on the right side of that figure where everything should be at/below zero. Since it is so far zoomed out, I don’t particularly trust it to show a small polarity reversal. Perhaps further inspection zooming in on a few pulses might show some clues. You showed us one…. Perhaps look at a few more… maybe only 2 in a row are required if some anomaly is occurring every other one.
Just a thought.
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I'll be interested to hear like if this is a normal induction motor or a ceiling fan type motor.
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(2B)+(2B)' ?