rc10
Electrical
- Aug 28, 2023
- 8
I have a multistage HVAC system that has four 3hp, 1800rpm condenser fans mounted in a common frame and duct with pressure switches set to energize them in sequence as refrigerant pressure increases. The system is less than a year old and we've had issues since installation with the fan motor breakers tripping. Our electricians have observed the following:
[ul]
[li]Stage 1 fan runs almost continuously year-round[/li]
[li]Stage 2 fan cycles on for 1-2 minutes and then de-energizes for 1-2 minutes during winter months, so approximately 30 starts/hour. In the summer, Stage 2 runs longer and Stage 3 has this short cyclic behavior.[/li]
[li]Stage 4 fan are almost never needed to maintain refrigerant pressure.[/li]
[li]When Stage 1 is running, the other 3 fans rotate backwards ~700rpm. When Stage 1 and 2 are running, Stage 3 and 4 fans are spinning backwards ~1100rpm. Starting current when Stage 3 cycles on was measured to be ~30A.[/li]
[li]We found the contactor for the Stage 3 fan motor to have significantly heat/soot marks on the contacts compared to Stage 1/2. We have multiple trains of these HVAC units with the same conditions.[/li]
[/ul]
Our engineering design consultants disagree with my opinion that the design is incorrect. They're saying that the thermal trip on the breaker shouldn't be exceeded because it should take 30A for ~30 seconds to trip versus the 30A for the ~5 seconds it takes for the fan to stop reverse rotation and accelerate to 1800rpm. They're also saying that this won't be a reliability issue because the motor is rated for locked rotor current for 23 seconds. I contend that the frequent starts (30/hr vs NEMA guidance of 19/hr), rotor heating presented by reverse-rotation starts, and stress on the thermal overload mechanism are causing trips and will impact long term performance.
I'm looking for recommendations on how to refute their argument so I don't get stuck with these things. My fear is that with summer over, the weather we need to test for is gone until next year. Is there any good way to quantify the impact of reverse starts and frequent cycling on the motor and breaker performance long-term? My suggestion is to reduce fan blade pitch so each stage can hopefully run longer between setpoint and reset, are there any other relatively simple methods to reducing the behavior we've seen? Is there any more data I should collect that would help prove a poor design?
[ul]
[li]Stage 1 fan runs almost continuously year-round[/li]
[li]Stage 2 fan cycles on for 1-2 minutes and then de-energizes for 1-2 minutes during winter months, so approximately 30 starts/hour. In the summer, Stage 2 runs longer and Stage 3 has this short cyclic behavior.[/li]
[li]Stage 4 fan are almost never needed to maintain refrigerant pressure.[/li]
[li]When Stage 1 is running, the other 3 fans rotate backwards ~700rpm. When Stage 1 and 2 are running, Stage 3 and 4 fans are spinning backwards ~1100rpm. Starting current when Stage 3 cycles on was measured to be ~30A.[/li]
[li]We found the contactor for the Stage 3 fan motor to have significantly heat/soot marks on the contacts compared to Stage 1/2. We have multiple trains of these HVAC units with the same conditions.[/li]
[/ul]
Our engineering design consultants disagree with my opinion that the design is incorrect. They're saying that the thermal trip on the breaker shouldn't be exceeded because it should take 30A for ~30 seconds to trip versus the 30A for the ~5 seconds it takes for the fan to stop reverse rotation and accelerate to 1800rpm. They're also saying that this won't be a reliability issue because the motor is rated for locked rotor current for 23 seconds. I contend that the frequent starts (30/hr vs NEMA guidance of 19/hr), rotor heating presented by reverse-rotation starts, and stress on the thermal overload mechanism are causing trips and will impact long term performance.
I'm looking for recommendations on how to refute their argument so I don't get stuck with these things. My fear is that with summer over, the weather we need to test for is gone until next year. Is there any good way to quantify the impact of reverse starts and frequent cycling on the motor and breaker performance long-term? My suggestion is to reduce fan blade pitch so each stage can hopefully run longer between setpoint and reset, are there any other relatively simple methods to reducing the behavior we've seen? Is there any more data I should collect that would help prove a poor design?