575V in Canada is no odder than 460V in the US. The standard system voltages are multiples of 120V, (120V, 240V, 480V, and in Canada 600V), the standard motor voltages are multiples of 115V. (115V, 230V, 460V, and in Canada 600V).
In some parts of Canada the 575 volt source is nominal voltage. NOPE, That's the standard motor voltage.
The Canadian Electrical Code gives the voltages as 120V, 208V, 240V, 277V, 347V, 416V, 480V, and 600V.
aLIJ23, CHECK YOUR VFD DEFAULT VOLTAGE SETTING AS JRAEF SUGGESTED, or go to a less knowledgeable forum for an answer that you like.
Alij23 said:
The bus is AC 600 Volt, guys we have to put this meter problem aside ,the problem is what can cause high AMPS ?as i mentioned before if i run the fan locally(bypassing the controller) every thing is alright but as soon as VFD comes to picture every thing starts changing (high amps and low voltage) the other thing is my frequency is 55hz right now ,i was wondering if we run the fan under 60 Hz and this interesting phenomena keeps increasing the current,then i have to modify the breaker settings too .
Perhaps, Alij23 you will be happier asking on a different forum.
One last time: VFD's have characteristics that are not like anything else you may have worked on. The basic principals still apply, but some things that in the past were taken for granted have changed.
As a result, the old ways of troubleshooting may not be valid for VFD's.
You don't seem to understand the difficulty of measuring the output current of a VFD, let alone the reasons for that difficulty.
Because of this, you want to disregard meter issues. Yes, by all means disregard the meter issues, not because you don't understand them, but because they are probably inaccurate.
Do some Googling and find out what the DC Bus voltage is in a VFD. It is not the voltage on the MCC bus.
Bill
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"Why not the best?"
Jimmy Carter