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bentov
Electrical
- Feb 2, 2004
- 74
I notice specs for soft start combination controllers usually call for shunt trip breakers to isolate the motor in case of a soft start failure. How is that soft start failure (shorted SCR's, most likely) any different than, say, welded contacts on a regular starter caused by fault current? Why is an extra level of Short Circuit Protection needed?
So, if we retrofit a failed ARV or wye-delta controller with a soft starter, is there some reason we need to incur the extra cost of a shunt trip or fault contactor?
So, if we retrofit a failed ARV or wye-delta controller with a soft starter, is there some reason we need to incur the extra cost of a shunt trip or fault contactor?