naejharas
Electrical
- Jan 31, 2005
- 2
I have a crane/hoist application where two identical hoists/motors/VFDs on the same crane appear to be acting differently. One drive (I'll call it Drive A) shows expected output current, voltage, and torque readings at no hook load, read off the drive's keypad. The other drive (Drive B) shows expected output current, but high voltage and torque at no load. Drive B was swapped for a spare, and the spare had very similar readings at no load, leading me to believe there is nothing wrong with the drive.
As expected, the voltages of both drives increase when we increase the frequency/speed, but what is not expected is that Drive B reports about 60% torque at no load, and increases to nearly 150% at rated load/speed, while Drive A reports about 12% torque at no load and close to 100% at rated load/speed.
The drives' output currents were measured to be fairly close to what the drives reported, with no significant imbalancing.
The manufacturer's field technician told me that actual output voltage could not be measured for comparison because it is a DC pulse and that the drive is not actually controlling the voltage, only the current, so the variation in voltage, and therefore torque, is not anything to worry about necessarily (huh?).
Hmmm... here's my concern: two identical drives, motors, encoders, gearboxes, nearly identical lead lengths, and different torque readings. We've ruled out mechanical drag.
Would the drive act this way if the motor had a damaged winding? Or would we see increased or imbalanced currents? Of course the motor supplier is not willing to admit their motor could be damaged, and we're really not in a position to send it back, not knowing if it's the problem.
The drives are 480v, 50hp, Electromotive Impulse VG+ Series 2, connected closed loop flux vector with feedback from a motor-shaft-mounted encoder. Voltage drop is minimal over the full distance of the crane's travel. Each drive is supplied by its own drive isolating transformer. Braking is not connected for regeneration, excess power is dissipated through dynamic braking units/resistors. Motors are 460v, 60Hz, 50hp, inverter duty, 1000:1 CT, NEMA Design B. The motor lead lengths are about 50ft.
Thanks for any insight you may have.
As expected, the voltages of both drives increase when we increase the frequency/speed, but what is not expected is that Drive B reports about 60% torque at no load, and increases to nearly 150% at rated load/speed, while Drive A reports about 12% torque at no load and close to 100% at rated load/speed.
The drives' output currents were measured to be fairly close to what the drives reported, with no significant imbalancing.
The manufacturer's field technician told me that actual output voltage could not be measured for comparison because it is a DC pulse and that the drive is not actually controlling the voltage, only the current, so the variation in voltage, and therefore torque, is not anything to worry about necessarily (huh?).
Hmmm... here's my concern: two identical drives, motors, encoders, gearboxes, nearly identical lead lengths, and different torque readings. We've ruled out mechanical drag.
Would the drive act this way if the motor had a damaged winding? Or would we see increased or imbalanced currents? Of course the motor supplier is not willing to admit their motor could be damaged, and we're really not in a position to send it back, not knowing if it's the problem.
The drives are 480v, 50hp, Electromotive Impulse VG+ Series 2, connected closed loop flux vector with feedback from a motor-shaft-mounted encoder. Voltage drop is minimal over the full distance of the crane's travel. Each drive is supplied by its own drive isolating transformer. Braking is not connected for regeneration, excess power is dissipated through dynamic braking units/resistors. Motors are 460v, 60Hz, 50hp, inverter duty, 1000:1 CT, NEMA Design B. The motor lead lengths are about 50ft.
Thanks for any insight you may have.