sry110
Mechanical
- Jul 30, 2009
- 47
I need some input on wye start / delta run motor starting. I am a gearhead and V=IR is basically the extent of my electrical capability, so please bear with me.
First some background: I have a turning gear system consisting of an AC motor, driving into a worm gear speed reducer, and an overrunning clutch on the output shaft. When the unit is at rest the clutch is disengaged, and it requires approx. 5 revolutions of the AC motor to engage the clutch (i.e. it has to "twist" into engagement). During this 5 revolutions the motor is essentially unloaded (the only load it sees is its own inertia and the inertia of our worm gear reducer, which is negligible).
The problem: When the clutch engages after the 5 unloaded revolutions of the motor, the motor instantly sees the load of the driven equipment. So the motor goes from unloaded to fully loaded (Locked-rotor condition) in a split second. This rapid deceleration and instant onset of locked rotor torque output manifests as a large impact torque. There are components in the turning gear system that will yield/break due to the large impact torque. Note: we start the AC motor with an across-the-line motor starter, which the customer specs and provides.
We have tried using soft starters, but as soon as the soft starter sees that the motor is unloaded it basically shorts out and gives the motor full line voltage. So when our clutch engages, it's at full speed and full motor torque as though the soft starter wasn't there.
So now I'm considering a wye-delta starter. The motor is a 6-lead IEC motor (made by ABB), 4kW rated for Delta connection. As far as I can tell, if I use a wye-delya starter, the motor starts in Wye with reduced current/torque and stays in that mode until the timer times out, at which point it switches over to full across-the-line Delta mode. Looks like wye-delta starter is a "dummy" device in that it does not receive any feedback from the motor regarding loaded / unloaded condition.
So if I use the wye-delta starter, and keeping in mind that our motor is essentially unloaded and will get up to full speed very quickly, can I be confident that the motor will have reduced current / torque at the point of clutch engagement? Or does the motor react differently once it gets up to full speed (i.e. same problem we have with the soft starter)?
Any help will be appreciated!
First some background: I have a turning gear system consisting of an AC motor, driving into a worm gear speed reducer, and an overrunning clutch on the output shaft. When the unit is at rest the clutch is disengaged, and it requires approx. 5 revolutions of the AC motor to engage the clutch (i.e. it has to "twist" into engagement). During this 5 revolutions the motor is essentially unloaded (the only load it sees is its own inertia and the inertia of our worm gear reducer, which is negligible).
The problem: When the clutch engages after the 5 unloaded revolutions of the motor, the motor instantly sees the load of the driven equipment. So the motor goes from unloaded to fully loaded (Locked-rotor condition) in a split second. This rapid deceleration and instant onset of locked rotor torque output manifests as a large impact torque. There are components in the turning gear system that will yield/break due to the large impact torque. Note: we start the AC motor with an across-the-line motor starter, which the customer specs and provides.
We have tried using soft starters, but as soon as the soft starter sees that the motor is unloaded it basically shorts out and gives the motor full line voltage. So when our clutch engages, it's at full speed and full motor torque as though the soft starter wasn't there.
So now I'm considering a wye-delta starter. The motor is a 6-lead IEC motor (made by ABB), 4kW rated for Delta connection. As far as I can tell, if I use a wye-delya starter, the motor starts in Wye with reduced current/torque and stays in that mode until the timer times out, at which point it switches over to full across-the-line Delta mode. Looks like wye-delta starter is a "dummy" device in that it does not receive any feedback from the motor regarding loaded / unloaded condition.
So if I use the wye-delta starter, and keeping in mind that our motor is essentially unloaded and will get up to full speed very quickly, can I be confident that the motor will have reduced current / torque at the point of clutch engagement? Or does the motor react differently once it gets up to full speed (i.e. same problem we have with the soft starter)?
Any help will be appreciated!