ptonsparky
Tom
- Occupation
- EC - retired
I have several fans that may end up on the load side of a single VFD. Are the 140 manual motor starters suitable for this use?
There is a special version of the 140M called the “D8V” that is specifically designed to operate in the high harmonic content output of a VFD without nuisance tripping. If you use the standard versions, that is the potential problem; the harmonics in the output will cause the bi-metal elements to heat up disproportionately to the motor working current and nuisance trip. That in itself is not necessarily a problem because they trip sooner than they should, not later. But the problem becomes the human response to that when you have an adjustment dial; people will crank up the dial to avoid the nuisance, which can then let the motor be damaged when there is a real overload condition. If you have total control of the maintenance process and can ensure that the “crank ‘er up” mentality is controlled, then you can safely use the regular versions. Just be aware of the possibility of nuisance tripping. The D8V version has been calibrated to use downstream of a VFD at up to 4kHz carrier frequency and down to 25 Hz output speed.
All I have to is complain here and I get phone call.Thank you.
IDK why I can’t get a timely response from my local dealer. One would think the potential 200 of those would warrant some sort of response.
I know we don't want to be cycling fans ON manually after the VFD is up.
why not?
Starting / inrush current of adding a motor to an already running VFD is potentially dangerous to the transistors of the drive due to high di/dt.
Whew... at least I'm consistent...That's what I was thinking you've said before.
Starting / inrush current of adding a motor to an already running VFD is potentially dangerous to the transistors of the drive due to high di/dt.
In the case of turning on a small motor on a large running VFD that I can't imagine it is going to matter any. I would agree if it was a 1HP motor and a 1HP drive. But we are maybe looking at dozens of small motors here on a single large drive.
It's the rate of rise of the inrush current that's the issue, not the size of the spike. It can cause the transistors to self-commutate (turn themselves on) when not commanded to, which then cascades problems leading to their demise. A load reactor on the output of the VFD would help lessen that possibility.In the case of turning on a small motor on a large running VFD that I can't imagine it is going to matter any. I would agree if it was a 1HP motor and a 1HP drive. But we are maybe looking at dozens of small motors here on a single large drive.
Not sure why the tags would make a difference, but there is lots of documented evidence of the Common Mode Noise created by VFDs causing cows to quit producing milk because they can feel a sensation in their teats when hooked up to the milking machines. The trick is to be fastidious about all ground connections and shield grounding, use what are called "Common Mode Cores" (ferrite rings) on the output conductors and in some cases to have shielded drive isolation transformers feeding the VFDs. I have a friend in New Zealand that spent a LOT of time and money investigating this because it was causing dairy farmers near him to lose revenue.If they decide on the drives they will be in an attached building. How do the drives affect the tags or visa versa?
If they decide on the drives they will be in an attached building. How do the drives affect the tags or visa versa?
I'm told it's affects the devices trying to read the cows ear tags. The VFD and output wiring are basically like a giant FM antenna that cause interference issues. The closer the VFD and shorter the motor leads, the less interference.
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https://www.valleyvet.com/ct_detail.html?pgguid=C2ECD51C-D599-4BB1-8B06-E73CF9633B99.