Well, the OP from Sri Lanka only logged on for that one day and hasn’t been back since, so it’s likely he didn’t get the simplistic answer he was looking for and went to find it somewhere else.
That's his loss.
Chelny
Well, the OP from Sri Lanka only logged on for that one day and hasn’t been back since, so it’s likely he didn’t get the simplistic answer he was looking for and went to find it somewhere else.
ATSMan,
Correct, he never mentioned exactly when his fault occurred. Unless he comes back, we may never know.
On your second question, not exactly. A Soft Starter is only ramping or controlling the VOLTAGE, frequency remains the same. Whereas a VFD is controlling voltage and frequency together. With voltage control only, the motor torque varies by the square of the applied voltage, so at 50% voltage, the motor can only develop 25% of rated torque. Because the VFD maintains the motors design V/Hz ratio, it can make the motor develop rated torque at any speed. That makes a big difference in starting a load. So comparatively, at 50% speed, you would be at 50% voltage, but 100% torque is available from that motor.
Well, the OP from Sri Lanka only logged on for that one day and hasn’t been back since, so it’s likely he didn’t get the simplistic answer he was looking for and went to find it somewhere else.
Yes it is...I call this the Cassandra complex. I occasionally get asked a question by someone working on a DIY project. If my response conflicts with what they wanted to do they just disregard it and do what they had originally planned. It is incredibly frustrating.
Nicely put. I'm going to use that... For me it's not just DIY people. I get it all the time with industrials, especially bean counters who don't want to cough up the money it will take to avoid a catastrophic failure. It's frustrating, but at the same time can be lucrative because when the failure I warned about DOES happen, the price tag to get them back on line is ALWAYS a lot more than the original proposal. I just went through this back in December; quoted the spare parts for a project, they didn't buy them, then 3 years later a major component took a hit and failed, it took a week to get them back on line. Lots and lots of OT, air freight etc., PLUS they suffered over $10k/day in production losses. Oh well...The Cassandra complex is a psychological phenomenon in which an individual's accurate prediction of a crisis is ignored or dismissed.
Yes it is...
Nicely put. I'm going to use that... For me it's not just DIY people. I get it all the time with industrials, especially bean counters who don't want to cough up the money it will take to avoid a catastrophic failure. It's frustrating, but at the same time can be lucrative because when the failure I warned about DOES happen, the price tag to get them back on line is ALWAYS a lot more than the original proposal. I just went through this back in December; quoted the spare parts for a project, they didn't buy them, then 3 years later a major component took a hit and failed, it took a week to get them back on line. Lots and lots of OT, air freight etc., PLUS they suffered over $10k/day in production losses. Oh well...
I personally suffer from this ailment on occasion myself, most of us probably have. But why ‘Cassandra’? Because it sounds better than HUA?I call this the Cassandra complex. I occasionally get asked a question by someone working on a DIY project. If my response conflicts with what they wanted to do they just disregard it and do what they had originally planned. It is incredibly frustrating.
Well, the OP from Sri Lanka only logged on for that one day and hasn’t been back since, so it’s likely he didn’t get the simplistic answer he was looking for and went to find it somewhere else.
When I was in Australia I had to watch the amount of data I used every time I sat in front of the computer. I always keep my host aware of how much I used every month.
Wow, this thread has continue...
Whom needs a cellular base station subsystem (gsm/3G tower) in a place of Australian desert where there's couple of living souls passing twice a month, but they are Dingos.
So I would say that every country has uninhabited areas where it's pointless to have café with free wi-fi or gsm tower.
P.S. The OP (or its people) just 'forgot' to connect dc brake with which were equipped gear motors, this caused a trip. Or he just turned over braking ring in case if it was equipped with mech brake. And he forgot already where and when he wrote here and what he wrote here.
I faced with such cases when el. installation was performed by customer's people.
Chelny