winnie
Senior Member
- Location
- Springfield, MA, USA
- Occupation
- Electric motor research
Does the operating state if the 75kVA unit affect the startup tripping of the 51kVA unit?
Jon
Jon
Does the operating state if the 75kVA unit affect the startup tripping of the 51kVA unit? Jon
the 200 amp never blows when switching the transformer on with the breaker in three phase panel or with unfused disconnect, it would only blow when bypassing the breaker in the 3ph panel. Turning trans on with unfused disconnect.Are you sure the breaker is operating as rated? Can you switch the 200 amp breakers between the two transformers, one breaker could be weak and open on low current, or the other one might not open at the same point as the first.
One clamp on meter moving between phases.Are the currents taken at the same time or clamp one, move it and clamp two, then three?
or
Three different meters?
Did the electrician have a three phase PQ Meter?
The 200 amp breaker was only tripped 2 times when we did breaker panel bypass test.I think that Barbqranch is asking is if the 200A breaker currently feeding the 51 kVA unit has become 'weak' because of frequent tripping on the (presumed defective) earlier transformer. This is possible, but requires the electrician to test.
Thanks for sending the summary. I'd not realized that there are essentially 2 separate 200A systems.
-Jon
All the engineers here really, really what to find the root cause of the problem. That's the way we are hard-wired. As a practical matter, is there a huge problem just leaving the transformer energized all the time?The 200 amp breaker was only tripped 2 times when we did breaker panel bypass test.
Also I have reached out to DMG to try and get the Power Quality Meter Files from December 9th that they took.
Have you looked closely at that disconnect for proper operation?
the 200 amp never blows when switching the transformer on with the breaker in three phase panel or with unfused disconnect, it would only blow when bypassing the breaker in the 3ph panel. Turning trans on with unfused disconnect.
I got the files from DMG of course you will need the Fluke Power Log 430-II software to view it, see link for zip file. https://www.dropbox.com/s/d4j8cqebcmp80jc/Power Readings.zip?dl=0All the engineers here really, really what to find the root cause of the problem. That's the way we are hard-wired. As a practical matter, is there a huge problem just leaving the transformer energized all the time?
No magnets, nothing in my shop is DC, put the new 2021 build transformer back in that 2005 drawed stupid amps with no secondary load.
How could a bad rectifier be influencing a transformer with no connected load at startup? Did I misunderstand that there is NO load on the transformer secondary or just that no machine start button has been pushed?Have you successfully run the supplied machine with the system?
Does the machine include a variable speed drive?
Does your clamp on current meter have DC measurement capability? (Only some current clamps will measure DC current.)
My current 'out on a limb' guess is that there is a bad VFD rectifier causing DC current flow in one of the transformer limbs. This causes a much larger than normal residual flux which triggers greater inrush.
Jon
How long does it take for the residual flux to disappear?Transformer inrush current is affected by the timing of applying power and by residual flux in the core. The residual flux is set by the previous operation of the transformer.
My out on a limb guess is that the previous operation of the machine is somehow setting up the transformer for a bad startup the next time around.
The only way I could see this happening is if the machine were somehow causing a DC imbalance, and even this is a pretty weak theory.
But you do have a history of installing multiple transformers, having them appear to work, and then having them unable to start because of excessive inrush.
Jon