sry110
Mechanical
- Jul 30, 2009
- 47
I'm a gear-head dabbling in soft starters and I need help!
We make a Turning Gear System which consists of the following: a 7.5 HP AC motor (460VAC / 3-ph / 60Hz, 1800 RPM) driving into a double-reduction worm gear reducer with 173.1:1 overall speed reduction ratio, with a shear pin coupling (mechanical fuse) and an overrunning clutch on the output shaft of the speed reducer gearbox. The clutch ultimately connects / disconnects our system from the customer's shaft, which is a very large diameter (i.e. high intertia load) induced draft fan in a power generating station.
The system is used to start the customer's shaft turning from rest (i.e. breakaway from rest). The Clutch we use requires 15 degrees of shaft rotation before it engages. Through our 173.1:1 gear ratio, that is 7.2 revolutions of the 7.5 HP motor. During this 7.2 revolutions the motor is essentially unloaded (loaded only by the torque required to turn our gear elements, which is negligible) so it is up to full speed and when the clutch engages, it slams into engagement with the Customer's stationary shaft which creates a shock load that damages components in our system.
So, we need a soft-start motor controller that will force the voltage (and therefore torque) to ramp over a set period of time regardless of the load on the motor. This way we know that when the clutch engages, while it may be at full speed it is only at a fraction of full torque. I know most soft starters will go to across the line voltage as soon as the motor is up to full speed and no load, but that does us no good since the first 7.2 revolutions are unloaded. We need it to always go through its voltage / torque ramp.
Does such an animal exist?
We make a Turning Gear System which consists of the following: a 7.5 HP AC motor (460VAC / 3-ph / 60Hz, 1800 RPM) driving into a double-reduction worm gear reducer with 173.1:1 overall speed reduction ratio, with a shear pin coupling (mechanical fuse) and an overrunning clutch on the output shaft of the speed reducer gearbox. The clutch ultimately connects / disconnects our system from the customer's shaft, which is a very large diameter (i.e. high intertia load) induced draft fan in a power generating station.
The system is used to start the customer's shaft turning from rest (i.e. breakaway from rest). The Clutch we use requires 15 degrees of shaft rotation before it engages. Through our 173.1:1 gear ratio, that is 7.2 revolutions of the 7.5 HP motor. During this 7.2 revolutions the motor is essentially unloaded (loaded only by the torque required to turn our gear elements, which is negligible) so it is up to full speed and when the clutch engages, it slams into engagement with the Customer's stationary shaft which creates a shock load that damages components in our system.
So, we need a soft-start motor controller that will force the voltage (and therefore torque) to ramp over a set period of time regardless of the load on the motor. This way we know that when the clutch engages, while it may be at full speed it is only at a fraction of full torque. I know most soft starters will go to across the line voltage as soon as the motor is up to full speed and no load, but that does us no good since the first 7.2 revolutions are unloaded. We need it to always go through its voltage / torque ramp.
Does such an animal exist?