pierrec
Computer
- Apr 26, 2003
- 7
Hi:
We had a wound rotor failure while commissionning a new
slip energy recovery drive. Arcing occured in the brush
slip ring area. I wonder if anyone could explain what might
have happened. Here is the story:
The 500HP/4KV motor drives a pump. It can be run either
with the drive in variable speed mode, or in fixed speed mode. In fixed speed mode a resistor banks and three contactors are used to start the motor and bring it up to
speed. Rotor disconnects and a mechanical interlock make it
impossible to have both systems on at the same time.
The guys doing the commissionning needed to have the drive
connected to the motor while it was starting with the resistors. This allowed the drive to measure voltages and log data in order to calibrate drive parameters.
They defeated the mechanical interlock and wired a temporary switch to initiate the resistors contactors sequence. Normally, this sequence starts with closing the HV breaker and stops as soon as the breaker opens.
They then closed the HV breaker and hit the switch for about 10 seconds. The first step will typically last about 15 seconds so they never went beyond that. When they turned the switch to off (which did not open the HV breaker) the motor winded down a bit and then... BOOM - there was arcing around the rings.
The motor name plate states a 1090 V rotor voltage.
Any explanation would be appreciated.
We had a wound rotor failure while commissionning a new
slip energy recovery drive. Arcing occured in the brush
slip ring area. I wonder if anyone could explain what might
have happened. Here is the story:
The 500HP/4KV motor drives a pump. It can be run either
with the drive in variable speed mode, or in fixed speed mode. In fixed speed mode a resistor banks and three contactors are used to start the motor and bring it up to
speed. Rotor disconnects and a mechanical interlock make it
impossible to have both systems on at the same time.
The guys doing the commissionning needed to have the drive
connected to the motor while it was starting with the resistors. This allowed the drive to measure voltages and log data in order to calibrate drive parameters.
They defeated the mechanical interlock and wired a temporary switch to initiate the resistors contactors sequence. Normally, this sequence starts with closing the HV breaker and stops as soon as the breaker opens.
They then closed the HV breaker and hit the switch for about 10 seconds. The first step will typically last about 15 seconds so they never went beyond that. When they turned the switch to off (which did not open the HV breaker) the motor winded down a bit and then... BOOM - there was arcing around the rings.
The motor name plate states a 1090 V rotor voltage.
Any explanation would be appreciated.