Kingstonrupp
Electrical
- Oct 24, 2008
- 9
Hello,
I have come across a situation where available power on site is from a single phase 480VAC transformer with one leg grounded.
There are a couple VFD loads requiring 480VAC 3-phase power. Separate single phase VFDs were purchased and de-rated to account for the additional current requirements.
A question came back from the field as to whether or not the VFD would operated properly. The VFD is rated 80HP but is running a 40HP load. It is a basic 6-pule VFD with a diode rectifier bridge on the front end, DC bus with capacitor and two DC link reactors, IGBTs on the output. My rationale is that yes, the VFD will operate fine as long as the "loss of phase" monitoring is disabled. The VFD should not care if one of the supply conductors is grounded at the transformer or not as long as there is 480VAC between the two.
Further though, I started questioning what would happen if the DC bus within the VFD were to fault to ground. My thoughts are that if the + bus faults, my fusing should blow (good). If the - bus faults, I am not 100% sure what is n going to happen. I don't think the fusing would blow since this conductor is already tied to ground. The VFD may not operate properly anymore since the diodes are essentially bypassed on the - bus. Would my VFD fault on DC bus voltage issues?
I don't believe there are any safety issues with respect to electric shock since the VFD enclosure and the site ground are all the same potential.
Can anyone enlighten me on the possible predicaments with this setup. Has anyone used this type of setup before?
Thanks
I have come across a situation where available power on site is from a single phase 480VAC transformer with one leg grounded.
There are a couple VFD loads requiring 480VAC 3-phase power. Separate single phase VFDs were purchased and de-rated to account for the additional current requirements.
A question came back from the field as to whether or not the VFD would operated properly. The VFD is rated 80HP but is running a 40HP load. It is a basic 6-pule VFD with a diode rectifier bridge on the front end, DC bus with capacitor and two DC link reactors, IGBTs on the output. My rationale is that yes, the VFD will operate fine as long as the "loss of phase" monitoring is disabled. The VFD should not care if one of the supply conductors is grounded at the transformer or not as long as there is 480VAC between the two.
Further though, I started questioning what would happen if the DC bus within the VFD were to fault to ground. My thoughts are that if the + bus faults, my fusing should blow (good). If the - bus faults, I am not 100% sure what is n going to happen. I don't think the fusing would blow since this conductor is already tied to ground. The VFD may not operate properly anymore since the diodes are essentially bypassed on the - bus. Would my VFD fault on DC bus voltage issues?
I don't believe there are any safety issues with respect to electric shock since the VFD enclosure and the site ground are all the same potential.
Can anyone enlighten me on the possible predicaments with this setup. Has anyone used this type of setup before?
Thanks