gornea
Nuclear
- Nov 20, 2015
- 3
Hi,
I'm really curious to understand the following problem. I brought a vacuum pump from Switzerland to Canada. Originally the pump was obviously not designed to run in Canada. Also, the pump is pretty old but used to work flawlessly in Switzerland. I attached a picture with the few labels still present on the pump. It seems it was designed to run on single phase 220 V at 50 Hz. In Switzerland it was actually running fine on 230 V 50 Hz. I thought in Canada I would be able to make it work using a step-up converter. This is the first thing I tried. It blew the fuse on the power line where the converter was plugged in. I thought I needed more current and so I changed the plug to be able to connect the pump directly to a single phase "208 V" power outlet. In the building where I'm now it seems the mains is a little bit old. The neutral to phase is actually 115 V and the phase to phase is 200 V only. Anyway, in this configuration, that's with a single phase 200 V and 60 Hz line, the pump works for a while, about 15 seconds and then a thermal protection on the pump kicks in. When it runs, the pump doesn't seem to run correctly. The sound it makes is different from what I'm used to, it vibrates more and there is a periodic loud click. Anyway, I'm surprised that increasing the frequency from 50 Hz to 60 Hz makes such a huge effect. Because the voltage is lower and the frequency higher, I would expect the motor would run cooler not hotter. So I don't understand why the thermal switch kicks in! Before I invest 2000$ in a frequency converter and discover that the pump was actually mechanically damaged during transport, could you comment about what can possibly go wrong when trying to run a Edwards pump at 60 Hz instead of 50 Hz, in case anybody knows more about these vacuum pumps? I guess fundamentally the problem is that the motor pulls too much current but why? Is it possible that the mechanical load increases so much at 60 Hz that the motor can not drive it properly?
Thanks a lot!
Razvan
I'm really curious to understand the following problem. I brought a vacuum pump from Switzerland to Canada. Originally the pump was obviously not designed to run in Canada. Also, the pump is pretty old but used to work flawlessly in Switzerland. I attached a picture with the few labels still present on the pump. It seems it was designed to run on single phase 220 V at 50 Hz. In Switzerland it was actually running fine on 230 V 50 Hz. I thought in Canada I would be able to make it work using a step-up converter. This is the first thing I tried. It blew the fuse on the power line where the converter was plugged in. I thought I needed more current and so I changed the plug to be able to connect the pump directly to a single phase "208 V" power outlet. In the building where I'm now it seems the mains is a little bit old. The neutral to phase is actually 115 V and the phase to phase is 200 V only. Anyway, in this configuration, that's with a single phase 200 V and 60 Hz line, the pump works for a while, about 15 seconds and then a thermal protection on the pump kicks in. When it runs, the pump doesn't seem to run correctly. The sound it makes is different from what I'm used to, it vibrates more and there is a periodic loud click. Anyway, I'm surprised that increasing the frequency from 50 Hz to 60 Hz makes such a huge effect. Because the voltage is lower and the frequency higher, I would expect the motor would run cooler not hotter. So I don't understand why the thermal switch kicks in! Before I invest 2000$ in a frequency converter and discover that the pump was actually mechanically damaged during transport, could you comment about what can possibly go wrong when trying to run a Edwards pump at 60 Hz instead of 50 Hz, in case anybody knows more about these vacuum pumps? I guess fundamentally the problem is that the motor pulls too much current but why? Is it possible that the mechanical load increases so much at 60 Hz that the motor can not drive it properly?
Thanks a lot!
Razvan