TM519
Member
- Location
- United States
Hi everyone, I have a VFD-driven motor that is thermally protected by both stator and bearing RTD's, 2 per phase. The VFD that will be driving the motor has an option for motor thermal overload fault protection to be turned on and the plant doesn't want to activate it because they say they have gotten nuisance trips from this setting at other plants in the past.
The VFD manual states "A Motor Thermal Overload Alarm 1 of an impending overload fault is issued as a warning, when the motor current exceeds the overload pending parameter. A Motor Thermal Overload Alarm 2 is issued an a thermal trip timer is started, when the drive current exceeds the overload setting. If the this condition is present for a period greater than the time set in the Overload timeout parameter, the drive will trip and annunciate the even as Motor Thermal Overload Fault"
While I can agree that the RTD's will protect the motor itself from any thermal issues (RTD's are hooked into the DCS system) is there anything that the motor thermal overload fault setting on the VFD does to protect the VFD itself that we would be putting the VFD in harms way if we deactivated the setting?
The VFD manual states "A Motor Thermal Overload Alarm 1 of an impending overload fault is issued as a warning, when the motor current exceeds the overload pending parameter. A Motor Thermal Overload Alarm 2 is issued an a thermal trip timer is started, when the drive current exceeds the overload setting. If the this condition is present for a period greater than the time set in the Overload timeout parameter, the drive will trip and annunciate the even as Motor Thermal Overload Fault"
While I can agree that the RTD's will protect the motor itself from any thermal issues (RTD's are hooked into the DCS system) is there anything that the motor thermal overload fault setting on the VFD does to protect the VFD itself that we would be putting the VFD in harms way if we deactivated the setting?