dk18
Mechanical
- Jul 9, 2004
- 3
Has any one had experience applying a VFD to a submersible motor?
My concern is two different submersible motor manufactures require starting current 3xFLA on a VFD service. I have many applications that I have applied VFD’s to centrifugal pump loads (variable torque) and I have never seen a starting current on air cooled motors that exceed 110% FLA. The drives that I typically deal with have a 200% FLA max trip. The motor requires a ramp time of 1s to 30Hz, which I tested on a smaller air cooled motor and I still could not exceed FLA on start up. I have adequate velocity flow over the motor at minimum speed. My concern is that I have a 125hp submersible pump and to properly size a VFD I would require a 300hp drive per the drive manufacturer.
Has anyone run into this or can explain why the starting current is so high on a submersible motor compared to an air cooled motor.
125hp @ 1800rpm
460V/3ph/60Hz
174FLA
submersible motor
variable torque load
600ft cable run
My concern is two different submersible motor manufactures require starting current 3xFLA on a VFD service. I have many applications that I have applied VFD’s to centrifugal pump loads (variable torque) and I have never seen a starting current on air cooled motors that exceed 110% FLA. The drives that I typically deal with have a 200% FLA max trip. The motor requires a ramp time of 1s to 30Hz, which I tested on a smaller air cooled motor and I still could not exceed FLA on start up. I have adequate velocity flow over the motor at minimum speed. My concern is that I have a 125hp submersible pump and to properly size a VFD I would require a 300hp drive per the drive manufacturer.
Has anyone run into this or can explain why the starting current is so high on a submersible motor compared to an air cooled motor.
125hp @ 1800rpm
460V/3ph/60Hz
174FLA
submersible motor
variable torque load
600ft cable run