Upto what kilowatt of power a dol starter or a star delta starter or a soft starter is choosen for motors. Please help. There are various ranges available on internet, so which one is correct.
Thanks
Forget wye delta. It’s just another soft starter and these days the electronic one is better and cheaper.
That leaves two choices. Soft starting Is chosen for several application specific reasons:
1. You are above the size where contactors are available. So it’s either soft starting or using a circuit breaker which except in very low duty applications is not a great way to do it.
2. You have some kind of current limitation, either breaker, transformer, or generator. A soft start is a trade off which allows for smaller equipment.
3. You need “slow roll” for maintenance/tooling reasons. Some soft starts can do low speeds in either direction (cycloconverter mode) but is much less expensive than a VFD.
4. Reduced mechanical torque requirements and/or extended mechanical life. Kurt psi’s can be severely reduced (the “snap” that bends shafts at startup). This results in cheaper, smaller mechanical equipment and/or longer life. This is much more important above 250 kw.
5. Greatly increased contactor life from lots of starts/stops. Contactors have a stated electrical and mechanical life. Electrical life is often 1/3rd of mechanical life and far less in AC4 applications. In a bypass configuration life is typically 20 years irrespective of load.
6. Water hammer issues. This is for both soft starting and soft stopping.
7. Braking. A soft start can generate DC injection braking at very high torques very inexpensively.
8. You need/want communications, electronic overloads, current/power feedback, or rotor protection (above 150 kw) which you get for “free”.
9. Motor heaters when offline using the stator to increase insulation life.
Down to around 25 kw soft starts still exist but they are less common. For all the reasons above realistically unless you need a VFD, DOL is a cost decision.
One way you can look at it is what us it worth to get close to full life (20 years) out if your insulation assuming bearings hind up. It’s the cost of a rewind, installation labor, and lost production downtime.