Master Nater
Member
- Location
- Midwest
- Occupation
- Electrical Magician
assuming 3-phase motor, i'd check to see if you're missing a leg or if the contactor has burnt up one of the contacts. amp each leg with clamp meter.
3 phase with a missing leg is not going to result in any rotation at all.assuming 3-phase motor, i'd check to see if you're missing a leg or if the contactor has burnt up one of the contacts. amp each leg with clamp meter.
Yeah, spell check hates the word megger…Megger. Dang spell check.
It's PP at reading my mind for made up wordsYeah, spell check hates the word megger…
Agree on the OL setting. For some OLs it’s motor FLA x 1.2. Some OLs you set the dial to the motor FLA. I used an industrial labeler to print a label with hp, motor amps, SF, and OL setting this label goes on inside of panel doorE100 is a solid state OL relay. There is a trip indicator red LED on the front, it flashes a code to tell you why it tripped; one flash is OL, 2 flashes is phase loss, 3 is ground fault, etc. What is it flashing?
If it’s not flashing and is solid red, that means it’s a hardware fault, which can happen if there is severe voltage drop on startup. The E100 is self powered off of the line, so if the source is too weak and starting the motor causes the voltage to drop too much, it will fault the OLR.
Side issue: there is no “trip delay” that you can set for 30 seconds, that is probably the trip CLASS, and you should NOT be setting it to Class 30 unless this is a mill duty motor. Also, you should be setting the current setting to the motor nameplate FLC, not higher, even if the motor has a 1.15SF. The higher pickup point of the IL curve is ALREADY built into the relay. You are going to smoke that motor if it really does overload!
You really should RTFM…
Was just about to say the same thing. I'd replace the motor.I have found shorted windings in motors. Continuity tests will not find them nor will a merger.
