robertjo24
Industrial
- Aug 20, 2002
- 141
I was hoping someone could put me on to some good information regarding protecting other systems (communications, video, etc) from the EMI generated by VFD’s.
Here is the issue…
We have several locations where we will have small (12X14) building that houses motor switchgear and controls equipment (PLC’s, HMI computers, etc), as well as other equipment like CCTV camera encoders. We also will have some network devices in the same building. All the motor switch gear and VFD’s are on one side of the building and all the controls and network equipment is on the other. There are cable trays existing the building, but often times they are common trays with separators in the middle. We have some locations that cause network disruptions and distortion in the video when the drives fire up.
The electrical group swears the drives, cables, and panels are installed per manufacturer’s spec and that they have install shielding, filters, and the proper ground bonding to eliminate the EMI.
I would appreciate any info that would help me to better protect the comms systems from the noise the drives produce.
Here is the issue…
We have several locations where we will have small (12X14) building that houses motor switchgear and controls equipment (PLC’s, HMI computers, etc), as well as other equipment like CCTV camera encoders. We also will have some network devices in the same building. All the motor switch gear and VFD’s are on one side of the building and all the controls and network equipment is on the other. There are cable trays existing the building, but often times they are common trays with separators in the middle. We have some locations that cause network disruptions and distortion in the video when the drives fire up.
The electrical group swears the drives, cables, and panels are installed per manufacturer’s spec and that they have install shielding, filters, and the proper ground bonding to eliminate the EMI.
I would appreciate any info that would help me to better protect the comms systems from the noise the drives produce.