Surefire01
Electrical
- Oct 17, 2012
- 23
I have a small three phase test motor and on the nameplate it gives a power factor of 0.77. This equates to an angle of around 45 degrees. I hooked the motor up to an oscilloscope and measured around 4mS difference between the voltage and current.
Four milliseconds equates to around 72 degrees and the cosine of 72 gives a power factor of 0.34. That is some difference between the nameplate and the measured values.
One reason that I can think of for this discrepancy is that the value quoted on the nameplate is full load power factor and during my measurements the motor was running unloaded. Could this be the reason? If so it just goes to show how inefficient it is to run a motor partially loaded!
Four milliseconds equates to around 72 degrees and the cosine of 72 gives a power factor of 0.34. That is some difference between the nameplate and the measured values.
One reason that I can think of for this discrepancy is that the value quoted on the nameplate is full load power factor and during my measurements the motor was running unloaded. Could this be the reason? If so it just goes to show how inefficient it is to run a motor partially loaded!