SteveGass
Mechanical
- Jan 11, 2002
- 10
1. Is it possible to reliably sense motor rotation from back EMF during coast down to determine when the motor has stopped rotating?
2. Will we see similar or at least some back emf with all typical single and three phase induction motors in the few horsepower range?
3. If the answer to questions 1 and 2 is yes, can it still be done if we use DC injection braking to stop the motor more quickly?
We are looking to design a circuit to do this in a consumer tablesaw and the motors we are using are 1.5hp single phase 120/240 and 3-5 hp single or 3 phase 240/480. I have hooked an oscilliscope up to one of the 1.5 hp motors and it does generate a significant decaying sinusoidal back emf on the supply lines during coast down. The voltage could be as high as 50 volts to start with and decays to maybe less than a 1 volts at low speed - say 60 rpm. The voltage starts large at full speed, then decays until the centrifical switch to the cap closes, then it jumps up again do decay back to zero when the motor stops.
2. Will we see similar or at least some back emf with all typical single and three phase induction motors in the few horsepower range?
3. If the answer to questions 1 and 2 is yes, can it still be done if we use DC injection braking to stop the motor more quickly?
We are looking to design a circuit to do this in a consumer tablesaw and the motors we are using are 1.5hp single phase 120/240 and 3-5 hp single or 3 phase 240/480. I have hooked an oscilliscope up to one of the 1.5 hp motors and it does generate a significant decaying sinusoidal back emf on the supply lines during coast down. The voltage could be as high as 50 volts to start with and decays to maybe less than a 1 volts at low speed - say 60 rpm. The voltage starts large at full speed, then decays until the centrifical switch to the cap closes, then it jumps up again do decay back to zero when the motor stops.