KallH
Computer
- Feb 14, 2020
- 5
Hello I have a question about a VFD controlled motor.
I have an AC motor controlling a relatively constant torque load that has a rated torque far above the requirements for the system. Once in a while the mechanical system will jam causing physical damage to the system before any over protection is able to kick in. I would like it to be able to stall and trip before this happens. So for my question, am I able to simply reduce the motor rated voltage setting in the drive to below the rated nameplate to reduce output torque or will I also need to adjust the frequency to keep the same V/Hz profile?
If I do change these settings and the motor stalls, will there be any implications for the overload protection of the drive assuming I set the rated full load amps to the value on the motor nameplate?
It is using a fairly inexpensive drive, GS2 from automation direct which is fairly limited in overload protection settings from other VFDs I have used.
I have an AC motor controlling a relatively constant torque load that has a rated torque far above the requirements for the system. Once in a while the mechanical system will jam causing physical damage to the system before any over protection is able to kick in. I would like it to be able to stall and trip before this happens. So for my question, am I able to simply reduce the motor rated voltage setting in the drive to below the rated nameplate to reduce output torque or will I also need to adjust the frequency to keep the same V/Hz profile?
If I do change these settings and the motor stalls, will there be any implications for the overload protection of the drive assuming I set the rated full load amps to the value on the motor nameplate?
It is using a fairly inexpensive drive, GS2 from automation direct which is fairly limited in overload protection settings from other VFDs I have used.