rharr
Mechanical
- Aug 8, 2007
- 39
We have a situation with a plastic processing extruder where we have changed the screw design for more output and the maximum speed is now limited to 65 rpm. The old screw would turn about 85 rpm.
The drive motor is a 300 Hp DC working through a 15.49:1 reducer. With 1750 rpm at the motor we would see 113 at the output of the reducer (the extruder)
The amp load tops out at the rated 470 amps and we only see 65 rpm at the screw. Working backward through the reducer, the motor is turning 1007 rpm at full load.
It has been suggested to change the ratio in the reducer to get more power from the motor to turn the screw faster.
Will this really work? Can we turn the screw faster with a larger reduction through the gear box?
The drive motor is a 300 Hp DC working through a 15.49:1 reducer. With 1750 rpm at the motor we would see 113 at the output of the reducer (the extruder)
The amp load tops out at the rated 470 amps and we only see 65 rpm at the screw. Working backward through the reducer, the motor is turning 1007 rpm at full load.
It has been suggested to change the ratio in the reducer to get more power from the motor to turn the screw faster.
Will this really work? Can we turn the screw faster with a larger reduction through the gear box?