iaguy
Mechanical
- Nov 28, 2001
- 19
I have an application where I want to start a large inertial load, run it for a few minutes then stop it using the electric motor.
The startup cycle is a constant torque cycle going from 0 to 220 hp in six seconds. The torque goes from 0 to 9202 in-lbf in the same six seconds.
The load then drops to 88-115 hp for five + minutes.
Then I then want to stop the rotating load by back driving the electric motor. The torque would go from 8,305 in-lbf to 0 as the load stopped over a six second cycle. The maximum hp the motor would have to absorb would be 182 hp. It would go to 0 as the load decreased its speed.
The motor would then idle for 10 minutes while other operations are executed.
I would like to use a 150 hp electric motor to drive this arrangement. I assume it could handle the starting cycle torque & hp ( the motor would not start against this load) it is less than 200% of the rated power. Is there any thing to worry about?
What about the stopping cycle? Can I back drive the electric motor with this over-running load without problems?
The startup cycle is a constant torque cycle going from 0 to 220 hp in six seconds. The torque goes from 0 to 9202 in-lbf in the same six seconds.
The load then drops to 88-115 hp for five + minutes.
Then I then want to stop the rotating load by back driving the electric motor. The torque would go from 8,305 in-lbf to 0 as the load stopped over a six second cycle. The maximum hp the motor would have to absorb would be 182 hp. It would go to 0 as the load decreased its speed.
The motor would then idle for 10 minutes while other operations are executed.
I would like to use a 150 hp electric motor to drive this arrangement. I assume it could handle the starting cycle torque & hp ( the motor would not start against this load) it is less than 200% of the rated power. Is there any thing to worry about?
What about the stopping cycle? Can I back drive the electric motor with this over-running load without problems?