jimmy2times
Electrical
- Jun 26, 2007
- 138
We have some 150kw fire pumps on a ship. Some (6) are vsd fed and some (4) are star/delta starters, same design pump/motor in each case (i think, need to check that though)
This is first i hear of problem today, but apparently catastrophic mechanical failure is occuring on the shaft (shearing near keyway i was told). My mechanical colleague asked me today if this could be electrical problem. Apparently 8 failures over past year mainly VSD types but also has been S/D type failures as well more recently.
I advised that for a start different type of starters but i thought couldnt rule out completely. I gave him the spiel how shoddy S/D starters were, i.e. changeover dwell transient, which could lead to large torque. I them advised that VSD also could cause torque pulsation. Im a bit rusty on my drive theory these days, used to be due to counter rotating 5th and 7th harmonics setting up 6th harmonic mechanical resonance in air gap if my memory is correct ?? Or did i just dream that up! Is this still an issue with more modern drives and control algorithms?
I was going to start helping the guy out proper tomorrow and find out info on drive type etc. just wanted to get some feelers on what to look for/other advice before i delve in to documentation.
Any thoughts on same failure mode but with two independent electromechanical drive dynamics that lead to that failure. Or do people think this sounds more a mechanical/pump/application issue
Could it otherwise be VSD set-up (rather than harmonic torque pulsations) that could lead to mechanical failure, in the vsd failure cases.
This is first i hear of problem today, but apparently catastrophic mechanical failure is occuring on the shaft (shearing near keyway i was told). My mechanical colleague asked me today if this could be electrical problem. Apparently 8 failures over past year mainly VSD types but also has been S/D type failures as well more recently.
I advised that for a start different type of starters but i thought couldnt rule out completely. I gave him the spiel how shoddy S/D starters were, i.e. changeover dwell transient, which could lead to large torque. I them advised that VSD also could cause torque pulsation. Im a bit rusty on my drive theory these days, used to be due to counter rotating 5th and 7th harmonics setting up 6th harmonic mechanical resonance in air gap if my memory is correct ?? Or did i just dream that up! Is this still an issue with more modern drives and control algorithms?
I was going to start helping the guy out proper tomorrow and find out info on drive type etc. just wanted to get some feelers on what to look for/other advice before i delve in to documentation.
Any thoughts on same failure mode but with two independent electromechanical drive dynamics that lead to that failure. Or do people think this sounds more a mechanical/pump/application issue
Could it otherwise be VSD set-up (rather than harmonic torque pulsations) that could lead to mechanical failure, in the vsd failure cases.