stantomas
Electrical
- Nov 3, 2008
- 7
Hi,
Looking for any specific application info or general thoughts. This is a long standing problem. We had a Reliance 300 HP DC motor driving a "jumbo" roll on a paper machine. The motors would fail every 2-6 months. Failure was non driven end bearing housing would work itelf loose, then motor would fail. The "theory" was the motor was of poor design. So we changed to GE 300 HP DC motor. These motors are having similar failures: occurring every 2-4 months, had at least 1 of 4 failures was the same non driven end bearing failed, one failure was a motor warranty issue. It is my belief that since the problem seems to be not dependent on manufacturer, and similar failures are happening, that the root cause is more the application and/or the design of the motor mounting. The motor is on steel support some 6 ft in the air driving 40 ton tolls. All our other motors are on concrete slabs and they dont fail at this frequency.
I realize there isnt enough info to have a definite answer but possibly someone has previous similar motor application experience, knows of issues with GE or Reliance motors, or agrees the lack of solid mass for motor mounting is probably a no brainer!?
The problems is long standing here and it has long been viewed as a motor problem....
Thank you for any and all comments!
Looking for any specific application info or general thoughts. This is a long standing problem. We had a Reliance 300 HP DC motor driving a "jumbo" roll on a paper machine. The motors would fail every 2-6 months. Failure was non driven end bearing housing would work itelf loose, then motor would fail. The "theory" was the motor was of poor design. So we changed to GE 300 HP DC motor. These motors are having similar failures: occurring every 2-4 months, had at least 1 of 4 failures was the same non driven end bearing failed, one failure was a motor warranty issue. It is my belief that since the problem seems to be not dependent on manufacturer, and similar failures are happening, that the root cause is more the application and/or the design of the motor mounting. The motor is on steel support some 6 ft in the air driving 40 ton tolls. All our other motors are on concrete slabs and they dont fail at this frequency.
I realize there isnt enough info to have a definite answer but possibly someone has previous similar motor application experience, knows of issues with GE or Reliance motors, or agrees the lack of solid mass for motor mounting is probably a no brainer!?
The problems is long standing here and it has long been viewed as a motor problem....
Thank you for any and all comments!