TwoBlocked
Senior Member
- Location
- Bradford County, PA
- Occupation
- Industrial Electrician
Troubleshooting the problem took longer than I think it should and am interested in how others might have gone about it in order to try a different mindset next time. I fully expect that 19 out 23 replies will be in the category of Monday morning quarterbacking or design changes. Hopefully I can glean something useful from that 5 out of 23 more useful replies. (And what do 17, 23, and 5 have in common?)
The situation was a 5 HP, 480V, 3-ph induction motor running a pump that would run to fill a 500 gallon (?) tanks with some liquid (doesn't matter what). There was a remote panel fed from a distribution panel, and a local panel fed from the remote panel. (Actually they were only a few feet away from each other.) In each panel there was a contactor. The one in the remote panel had a 24VDC coil and overload relay that would be energized either by hardwired level sensors or by a "bypass" (hand) switch. The contactor in the local panel also had an overload relay, but a 480VAC coil. And there was an on/off selector switch on the local panel wired in series with the OL relay. The power for the coil came from the line power provided by the remote contactor.
To sum up, the two contactors were in series. The first was controlled by a 24VDC circuit with two modes; level control and "bypass" (hand). The second contactor was controlled by receiving line voltage from the first contactor that could be interrupted with a selector switch.
So what I am asking is for you fine folks to read the following, word for word, brief, service report and at each step consider what your NEXT step would have been and WHY. I am looking for different mindsets so I might have additional tools to work with. No fair saying what you would have done AFTER finding out what was wrong. (I can do that myself...)
"Motor/pump not running in either auto or bypass mode. Checked incoming voltage and control voltage - ok. Checked motor for open, shorts, and grounds - ok. Manually pushed local contactor in, resulting in loud hum and no rotation. Suspected a jammed pump. Dismantled pump, rotor turned free. Again manually pushed local contactor in, resulting in loud hum and no rotation. Checked motor connections in jbox - ok. Inspected and bench tested local and remote contactors with meter - ok. Re-installed remote contactor and tested while energized. Determined A-phase contacts not closing when coil was energized, but would close when operated manually. This was the cause of the local contactor not pulling in electrically and the motor single phasing. Provided customer with ordering info for remote contactor."
The situation was a 5 HP, 480V, 3-ph induction motor running a pump that would run to fill a 500 gallon (?) tanks with some liquid (doesn't matter what). There was a remote panel fed from a distribution panel, and a local panel fed from the remote panel. (Actually they were only a few feet away from each other.) In each panel there was a contactor. The one in the remote panel had a 24VDC coil and overload relay that would be energized either by hardwired level sensors or by a "bypass" (hand) switch. The contactor in the local panel also had an overload relay, but a 480VAC coil. And there was an on/off selector switch on the local panel wired in series with the OL relay. The power for the coil came from the line power provided by the remote contactor.
To sum up, the two contactors were in series. The first was controlled by a 24VDC circuit with two modes; level control and "bypass" (hand). The second contactor was controlled by receiving line voltage from the first contactor that could be interrupted with a selector switch.
So what I am asking is for you fine folks to read the following, word for word, brief, service report and at each step consider what your NEXT step would have been and WHY. I am looking for different mindsets so I might have additional tools to work with. No fair saying what you would have done AFTER finding out what was wrong. (I can do that myself...)
"Motor/pump not running in either auto or bypass mode. Checked incoming voltage and control voltage - ok. Checked motor for open, shorts, and grounds - ok. Manually pushed local contactor in, resulting in loud hum and no rotation. Suspected a jammed pump. Dismantled pump, rotor turned free. Again manually pushed local contactor in, resulting in loud hum and no rotation. Checked motor connections in jbox - ok. Inspected and bench tested local and remote contactors with meter - ok. Re-installed remote contactor and tested while energized. Determined A-phase contacts not closing when coil was energized, but would close when operated manually. This was the cause of the local contactor not pulling in electrically and the motor single phasing. Provided customer with ordering info for remote contactor."