diyfarmer
Mechanical
- Nov 26, 2007
- 17
I am trying to figure out a way to make a constant speed vacuum pump variable speed. The pump in question is used on a dairy farm and is sized for maximum vacuum requirements. Because maximum capacity is rarely required, the pump is often sucking air through the regulator, wasting a lot of electricity. Currently, the pump is belt driven by a 10hp single phase motor. The obvious solution, which is currently used on some farms, is to install a 3 phase motor with a VFD that will run off single phase. A pressure transducer is used to control the VFD.
The main drawback of this is if the VFD ever quits for some reason, the farm is SOL because there is no way to run the three phase motor off single phase. At 5 in the morning on a long weekend, the cows will not be happy waiting for a new VFD.
After some searching, I've concluded there is not really any single phase output VFD's available. Just an aside here though, could a single phase VFD work, if it was only brought in after the start winding was disconnected. ie, start the motor normally, but once the start switch opened, switch the supply to the VFD?
I also thought of using variable pulleys, controlled by a vacuum cylinder. As the vacuum level increased, the cylinder would "reduce" the size of the driving pulley, slowing the pump down. After more searching, it appears that pulleys like this are not very common. I'm also not sure how quick this system would respond or if it would oscillate at all.
My last possiblity would be to add a large vacuum resevoir, and put a simple pressure switch on the current vacuum pump, much like any air compressor. Not sure how big the tank would have to be to avoid constant cycling, and starting the motor often would likely waste the potential savings.
I'm drawing a blank now, does anyone know of other possibilities? I would prefer not to change the pump and it needs to be very reliable, or at least have a "limp mode" that would still allow the cows to be milked if something failed.
Thanks in advance for any responses!!!
The main drawback of this is if the VFD ever quits for some reason, the farm is SOL because there is no way to run the three phase motor off single phase. At 5 in the morning on a long weekend, the cows will not be happy waiting for a new VFD.
After some searching, I've concluded there is not really any single phase output VFD's available. Just an aside here though, could a single phase VFD work, if it was only brought in after the start winding was disconnected. ie, start the motor normally, but once the start switch opened, switch the supply to the VFD?
I also thought of using variable pulleys, controlled by a vacuum cylinder. As the vacuum level increased, the cylinder would "reduce" the size of the driving pulley, slowing the pump down. After more searching, it appears that pulleys like this are not very common. I'm also not sure how quick this system would respond or if it would oscillate at all.
My last possiblity would be to add a large vacuum resevoir, and put a simple pressure switch on the current vacuum pump, much like any air compressor. Not sure how big the tank would have to be to avoid constant cycling, and starting the motor often would likely waste the potential savings.
I'm drawing a blank now, does anyone know of other possibilities? I would prefer not to change the pump and it needs to be very reliable, or at least have a "limp mode" that would still allow the cows to be milked if something failed.
Thanks in advance for any responses!!!