podobing
Electrical
- Jan 28, 2013
- 49
Hello,
Underground coal mines use large electric motors to operate their ventilation fans. The number of fans required depends on the size and depth of the coal mine. One fan, in particular is a 2000 HP, 4kV, 890 rpm motor that is started directly across the line. The motor has two vibration sensors on it, one on the drive end (DE), and one on the ODE. The fan is a 10 foot diameter axi-vane fan. Both fan bearings are monitored with three axis accelerometers mounted to the fan pillar block bearings. The fan also turns at 890 rpm. This fan operates 24/7/365. If the fan is stopped, and the ventilation in the coal mine is disrupted, the mine must be evacuated. All sensors are monitored at a remote site 24/7/365.
I have not witnessed this personally, but from what I am told, occasionally, for no apparent reason, the fan motor "growls" for 3-4 seconds. Originally, when the motor growled,the motor vibration sensors tripped off and de-energized the motor, resulting in a mine-wide evacuation. The sensitivity on the motor vibration sensors has since been decreased, and now the motor growls, but the fan continues to operate. The acclerometers on the fan bearings do not pick up anything unusual. I was told that the "growl" sounds like a large transformer being energized.
Currently, we have a power system analyzer connected to the fan motor starter. The power system consists of a 138:69 kV substation, 4 miles of 556.5 ACSR line and a 5 MVA 69:4.16 kV transformer. The line is lightly loaded with other mining loads at this time. Since we installed the power system analyzer, we have had two vibration trips and no events being recorded on the power analyzer.
Any ideas?
Regards,
Podobing
Underground coal mines use large electric motors to operate their ventilation fans. The number of fans required depends on the size and depth of the coal mine. One fan, in particular is a 2000 HP, 4kV, 890 rpm motor that is started directly across the line. The motor has two vibration sensors on it, one on the drive end (DE), and one on the ODE. The fan is a 10 foot diameter axi-vane fan. Both fan bearings are monitored with three axis accelerometers mounted to the fan pillar block bearings. The fan also turns at 890 rpm. This fan operates 24/7/365. If the fan is stopped, and the ventilation in the coal mine is disrupted, the mine must be evacuated. All sensors are monitored at a remote site 24/7/365.
I have not witnessed this personally, but from what I am told, occasionally, for no apparent reason, the fan motor "growls" for 3-4 seconds. Originally, when the motor growled,the motor vibration sensors tripped off and de-energized the motor, resulting in a mine-wide evacuation. The sensitivity on the motor vibration sensors has since been decreased, and now the motor growls, but the fan continues to operate. The acclerometers on the fan bearings do not pick up anything unusual. I was told that the "growl" sounds like a large transformer being energized.
Currently, we have a power system analyzer connected to the fan motor starter. The power system consists of a 138:69 kV substation, 4 miles of 556.5 ACSR line and a 5 MVA 69:4.16 kV transformer. The line is lightly loaded with other mining loads at this time. Since we installed the power system analyzer, we have had two vibration trips and no events being recorded on the power analyzer.
Any ideas?
Regards,
Podobing