I should have picked up on this thread earlier. There are thousands of VFDS underground in mines completely type 4 enclosed, you do a dirty air system ? gasket heat sink in a filtered forced air duct. Thousands of VFDS in mill and commodity plants packaged the same, thousands of VFDS on oil wells taking care of all the rich Arabs oil wells in well over 50C ambient temperatures, I could go on. The integrators got past this long ago and have matured against their life long enemy, thermal degradation.
This thread began with what would be a VSI, PWM inverter. Pretty much the only type out there any more under 1000HP.
All have IGBTS sitting atop an aluminium heat sink. They can all run that heat sink up to 80+C. If you sink that heat out of your system with the right packaging, you only have a third of your heat load to contend with.
So do the math. They are all 97-98% efficient, lets round off 150HP to 100kW (unless you are from outside the US, you started with kW anyway). So we have 3kW or envision 30 x 100Watt lights bulbs of heat left.
Now put a stirring fan to create some turbulence in the type 4 section where the 1kW remains so as to prevent hot spots and distribute your remaining heat evenly to the exposed areas of your enclosure material, cold rolled steel for example. (no fibreglass please) Now figure out the thermal transfer per total exposed area and size your final enclosure. If your space is limited, consider a different material or add a heat exchanger, little ac unit, what have you.
But always remember - don't ever let any one extol the virtues of their brand over another. It is how they are packaged, Japanese, German, American or otherwise. All the VSI PWM varieties have the same limitations, anyone want to guess at how many IGBT factories are out there and whether amp for amp one IGBT will die sooner than another?
The really good VFD people should also be able to de-rate component MTBF also, ? if they can?t they are salespeople ??so beware.
I have to read back up this thread ? anyone mentioned F sub C yet?