Techs from two different drive companies were not big fans on operating motors for long periods above 60 Hz. I can not remember seeing a motor nameplate stating operating above 60 HZ. Right before I retired they had might have been twin 15 or 20 HP motors that VFD was programmed to run at a maximum of 66 HZ. The large hospital / research centers that I retired from appeared to oversize all AHU units. Just about every area had two supply fans from 40 to 125 HP supply fans and one smaller HP return fan. Even if one AHU was down to replace regular &'HEPA filters the other unit usually ran below 90%. They were smart to add crossover louvers that if an AHU unit comp!shot failed they would open louvers to have another AHU handle the air supply. In drive class what you termed starving input voltage they mentioned on most drives the output voltage & frequency are adjusted on a sliding scale. Example a 480 volt 60 HZ motor that speed is reduced where drive is at 30 HZ will have 240 volt output to motor. Of course we used to call drive outputs PWM Pulse Width Modulation. Believe drive IGBT'S may have at least a 5,000 HZ.