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1
- #1
VMMF
Electrical
- Apr 6, 2021
- 13
My provincial government just opened 3 tenders to provide voltage optimizers for 3 schools. I've been reading a bit about them and I really don't foresee many benefits.
I consulted these links:
Short length article
Medium length article
Long article
These were the essential ideas from the articles:
• The use of motors is the largest area where voltage optimisers can make savings. It has been shown that less power is drawn on white goods like fridges and freezers, but only a few percent less. The main savings are to be had in industrial and commercial motors.
• Lighting savings can be made on magnetic ballast or incandescent lighting (because they become slightly dimmer), but there are no savings on LEDs.Tthere is a benefit in the form of longevity as lighting installations operating at the higher voltage levels may deteriorate more quickly that those operating at a lower controlled voltage level. Converting to LED will save you far more money than any small savings gained by installing a voltage optimiser.
• Heaters will consume less power using a voltage optimiser, but consequently will produce less heat and therefore no savings are achieved – so in our opinion it is easier to simply turn the thermostat down!
If voltage optimization lowers the voltage, doesn't it make something like an industrial motor slower and less effective? Won't it make something like a refrigerator or an air conditioner less effective at cooling? Won't it make your lights dimmer?
The answer is sometimes yes, sometimes no. If you supply something like a motor with more voltage than it needs, it doesn't spin any faster: it just wastes the extra energy as heat. Reduce the voltage and you reduce that wasted heat before you reduce the useful energy that turns the motor. In other words, if you run the motor at its ideal, lower voltage, you make it more efficient. The energy you save in this way is energy you're not drawing from the power supply, so it translates into a financial saving (for you) and an environmental benefit (for the planet). It's worth remembering that if you run appliances with too much voltage or current, they'll wear out significantly more quickly. Extending the lives of electrical appliances also translates into financial and environmental benefits.
I have the following questions:
1) Does a motor of lets say 100 HP depend on the presence of a voltage higher than nominal to be able to deliver 115 HP for a short time (service factor 1.15)?
2) If I limit the maximum voltage supply to a motor to the nominal value how is that better to not limiting it a putting a capacitor to compensate the PF when the motor runs?
3) Is there really a benefit on installing voltage optimizers for industrial customers compared to an automatic tap changer transformer + a multi step capacitor bank + some harmonic filters (if required)?
4) Are you familiar or have you used this voltage optimizers technology. It seems like a sales wording for me
I consulted these links:
Short length article
Medium length article
Long article
These were the essential ideas from the articles:
• The use of motors is the largest area where voltage optimisers can make savings. It has been shown that less power is drawn on white goods like fridges and freezers, but only a few percent less. The main savings are to be had in industrial and commercial motors.
• Lighting savings can be made on magnetic ballast or incandescent lighting (because they become slightly dimmer), but there are no savings on LEDs.Tthere is a benefit in the form of longevity as lighting installations operating at the higher voltage levels may deteriorate more quickly that those operating at a lower controlled voltage level. Converting to LED will save you far more money than any small savings gained by installing a voltage optimiser.
• Heaters will consume less power using a voltage optimiser, but consequently will produce less heat and therefore no savings are achieved – so in our opinion it is easier to simply turn the thermostat down!
If voltage optimization lowers the voltage, doesn't it make something like an industrial motor slower and less effective? Won't it make something like a refrigerator or an air conditioner less effective at cooling? Won't it make your lights dimmer?
The answer is sometimes yes, sometimes no. If you supply something like a motor with more voltage than it needs, it doesn't spin any faster: it just wastes the extra energy as heat. Reduce the voltage and you reduce that wasted heat before you reduce the useful energy that turns the motor. In other words, if you run the motor at its ideal, lower voltage, you make it more efficient. The energy you save in this way is energy you're not drawing from the power supply, so it translates into a financial saving (for you) and an environmental benefit (for the planet). It's worth remembering that if you run appliances with too much voltage or current, they'll wear out significantly more quickly. Extending the lives of electrical appliances also translates into financial and environmental benefits.
I have the following questions:
1) Does a motor of lets say 100 HP depend on the presence of a voltage higher than nominal to be able to deliver 115 HP for a short time (service factor 1.15)?
2) If I limit the maximum voltage supply to a motor to the nominal value how is that better to not limiting it a putting a capacitor to compensate the PF when the motor runs?
3) Is there really a benefit on installing voltage optimizers for industrial customers compared to an automatic tap changer transformer + a multi step capacitor bank + some harmonic filters (if required)?
4) Are you familiar or have you used this voltage optimizers technology. It seems like a sales wording for me