winnie
Senior Member
- Location
- Springfield, MA, USA
- Occupation
- Electric motor research
It is possible (likely even) that the engineer was considering _simultaneous_ starting current and requiring an excessively tight voltage drop.
Before looking at transformers, I second the call to look at _240V_ motors, and taking a careful look at the voltage drop that the motors can tolerate.
It might be the case that the engineer is considering what voltage drop will do to the cameras/security system when the gates operate. Again it might pay to make the system tolerate a larger voltage drop than to try to prevent the voltage drop.
-Jon
Before looking at transformers, I second the call to look at _240V_ motors, and taking a careful look at the voltage drop that the motors can tolerate.
It might be the case that the engineer is considering what voltage drop will do to the cameras/security system when the gates operate. Again it might pay to make the system tolerate a larger voltage drop than to try to prevent the voltage drop.
-Jon