Hello,
I have a crane hoisting application that has really large inrush and starting torque requirements. The existing system is a pair of WRMs being controlled by old thyristor drives. The two motor/thyristor drive pairs are setup to be synced to lift a heavy load evenly.
As it is being increasingly hard to get replacement parts for the thyristor drives, I want to replace them with VFDs for about a 2 year duration until we can get the infrastructure in to replace the motors and gearboxes.
I know the insulation rating of the WRMs is likely not rated for the CIV of the drives but I only need them to last a couple more years.
I plan to keep the fixed resistance in the rotor that the existing thyrister drive uses so that I can get a more stable low speed operation with the VFD and WRM combo.
I plan to directly connect the two VFDs so that they can communicate with each other.
Anything else to be concerned about?
I have a crane hoisting application that has really large inrush and starting torque requirements. The existing system is a pair of WRMs being controlled by old thyristor drives. The two motor/thyristor drive pairs are setup to be synced to lift a heavy load evenly.
As it is being increasingly hard to get replacement parts for the thyristor drives, I want to replace them with VFDs for about a 2 year duration until we can get the infrastructure in to replace the motors and gearboxes.
I know the insulation rating of the WRMs is likely not rated for the CIV of the drives but I only need them to last a couple more years.
I plan to keep the fixed resistance in the rotor that the existing thyrister drive uses so that I can get a more stable low speed operation with the VFD and WRM combo.
I plan to directly connect the two VFDs so that they can communicate with each other.
Anything else to be concerned about?