Jieve
Mechanical
- Jul 16, 2011
- 130
Hello,
I was wondering if anyone could shed some light on what actually happens during the stationary and rotational motor parameter auto-identification that takes place when commissioning drives. The Siemens G120 units I've been working with apply something like 20V on and off to the motor (1hp, 400V) in stationary mode, then run it at around 1200 rpm for around 30 secs with 3-4 quick accelerations in the rotational ID mode. What parameters specifically is the drive measuring during each of these processes?
In sensorless vector mode, the drive does both the stationary measurements and the rotational measurements when I select that both should take place, but in V/hz mode it only does the static measurement. I guess the drive doesn't need any measured rotation parameters in V/hz mode, it just calculates the V/hz slope based on the motor data input on commissioning. This seems somewhat weird though, as the curve becomes non-linear at lower voltages.
Finally, should the motor always be decoupled from the load during this process? Or connected to it (assuming no damage can be done)?
Thanks for any responses.
I was wondering if anyone could shed some light on what actually happens during the stationary and rotational motor parameter auto-identification that takes place when commissioning drives. The Siemens G120 units I've been working with apply something like 20V on and off to the motor (1hp, 400V) in stationary mode, then run it at around 1200 rpm for around 30 secs with 3-4 quick accelerations in the rotational ID mode. What parameters specifically is the drive measuring during each of these processes?
In sensorless vector mode, the drive does both the stationary measurements and the rotational measurements when I select that both should take place, but in V/hz mode it only does the static measurement. I guess the drive doesn't need any measured rotation parameters in V/hz mode, it just calculates the V/hz slope based on the motor data input on commissioning. This seems somewhat weird though, as the curve becomes non-linear at lower voltages.
Finally, should the motor always be decoupled from the load during this process? Or connected to it (assuming no damage can be done)?
Thanks for any responses.