gtwy
Electrical
- Nov 26, 2007
- 47
I normally work the instrumentation/DCS side of things motor related so I dont deal with motors/ motor starting that often.
I was at a WWTP the other day tying some vibration probes into the DCS and was working near the MCC where a plant operator was changing a motor controller on a 100 HP 480v Hoffman blower motor. I noticed in the cubicle 2 controllers, one w/ a pneumatic TD relay. As I passed by the motor I noticed that the motor was only had three leads. Just my own curiosity I looked at the wiring and the power leads at the controllers are in parallel (line and load side-line sides fed directly from the CB), with 3 leads from each controller heading to the motor.
I must be missing something obvious. There are 3 blowers all w/ identical cubicles. I didnt check contactor ratings to see if one alone was too small to carry motor current....... why the controllers in parallel?
The blowers are 40 yrs old (and the motor probably not much younger) and I know that the cubicles were upgraded 10 yrs ago so I dont know if originally the motors were wye delta.
I was at a WWTP the other day tying some vibration probes into the DCS and was working near the MCC where a plant operator was changing a motor controller on a 100 HP 480v Hoffman blower motor. I noticed in the cubicle 2 controllers, one w/ a pneumatic TD relay. As I passed by the motor I noticed that the motor was only had three leads. Just my own curiosity I looked at the wiring and the power leads at the controllers are in parallel (line and load side-line sides fed directly from the CB), with 3 leads from each controller heading to the motor.
I must be missing something obvious. There are 3 blowers all w/ identical cubicles. I didnt check contactor ratings to see if one alone was too small to carry motor current....... why the controllers in parallel?
The blowers are 40 yrs old (and the motor probably not much younger) and I know that the cubicles were upgraded 10 yrs ago so I dont know if originally the motors were wye delta.