choochoo_baloo | 25/03/2022 02:59:04 |
![]() 282 forum posts 67 photos | I'm planning to convert my Senior M1 to VFD. Transwave's helpful "Converters and Inverters - layman's guide" is a lucid overview of the process, well worth a read. BUT...the original Crompton 3ph motor states 400V and I'm wondering whether these connections can be changed to delta/240V as required by inverters. Why does it lack the {W2, U2, V2, U1, V1, W1} that I've read about? Perhaps hiding behind that fibreboard? (NB I can't get to the motor for the time being for a fiddle, so am relying on these old photos.) |
DC31k | 25/03/2022 05:15:07 |
1186 forum posts 11 photos | As the data plate states, and as the connector block shows, the motor was supplied for 400v connection only. This means the srar point, the commoned connection of the three coils, is inside the motor body. To enable 230v three phase, you have to dismantle it, locate the star point and bring out the three wires to a six terminal connector block. Some motors are easy to do, others more difficult. The only way to find out is to take it to pieces and look. |
Martin Connelly | 25/03/2022 07:25:59 |
![]() 2549 forum posts 235 photos | Ask Transwave if a step up transformer is available or a 230/240 volt input 400 volt output VFD and what the cost would be. You may have the options of rooting out the star point, adding a transformer, getting a step up VFD or replacing the motor. You can then consider what is the best solution for you. There are probably videos on the internet of people accessing the star point. Martin C
|
Clive Foster | 25/03/2022 08:37:56 |
3630 forum posts 128 photos | Having looked into using a step up transformer before I'd say its never worth it unless you happen to luck into something suitable. Allegedly such things can be found in some old fashioned welders. Seems to be a fairly low power motor, current stamping on the data plate appears to be 1 amp, so maybe one of the multiple output transformers on machine tools with a 240 tapping might do the deed. The Bridgeport one can, allegedly, be used in step up. If I recall correctly the Brook Gryphon motors put the star point on top of the windings so its easy to get at. If the application is fairly undemanding one of the 220 V in, 380 V out economically priced import VFD boxes may well be satisfactory. We very rarely drive our tools at anything approaching full power so the odds are that the various performance limitations inherent to making an affordable device won't show up. Clive |
noel shelley | 25/03/2022 09:09:31 |
2308 forum posts 33 photos | If all you want to do is run the motor at it's rated speed 1450rpm then a transwave converter will give you 400v but if you really want variable speed ie a VFD then rewiring to delta. I would try to rewire if you must as Brooks motors are amongst the best. Good luck Noel. |
Andrew Tinsley | 25/03/2022 09:41:50 |
1817 forum posts 2 photos | Have rewired a similar Brookes motor and found the star point where Clive said. Nothing to stop you running the motor as is with 240 volt 3 phase but power will be reduced. I have done this on a suds pump motor where the star point was well and truly buried. Andrew. |
SillyOldDuffer | 25/03/2022 10:12:59 |
10668 forum posts 2415 photos | Posted by choochoo_baloo on 25/03/2022 02:59:04:
,,, the original Crompton 3ph motor states 400V and I'm wondering whether these connections can be changed to delta/240V as required by inverters. Why does it lack the {W2, U2, V2, U1, V1, W1} that I've read about? ...
Three phase motors contain three windings (coils), that can be connected up in either of two configurations, Star or Delta: On many motors, the ends of the three coils are brought out to the terminal box, ChooChoo's W2, U2, V2, U1, V1, W1, where W1 and W2 are the start and end of coil 'W'. etc. When this is done, the user can connect the motor in either star or delta. Star connected motors require 400V, delta needs 230V. Unfortunately, not all motors provide full access to both ends of all the coils. Instead the connections are made inside the motor, not easily available to the user. ChooChoo's motor was sold for 400V service, with no intention it would ever be changed. However, it may be possible. When the motor is opened up to expose the windings, it's likely the star point (marked N above) is accessible. If so, break the connection and extend the 3 wires outside the motor so the coils can be reconnected in Delta in a terminal box. Alternatively, it's recently become possible to buy affordable 230V input VFDs that produce 400V out to drive a star motor without modification. I'd be inclined to go that way because it's less work! When buying the VFD, it may be specified as 220/380V rather than 230/400V because most of the world is 220V based. Should be 'good enough'. Usual Health and Safety warning when working with mains power, but be aware a 400V shock is much nastier than ordinary mains. Never work on live wiring and make sure the connections are understood etc. Dave
|
Gary Wooding | 25/03/2022 10:27:21 |
1074 forum posts 290 photos | choochoo: My mill has a similar GRYPHON motor on the table feed (see my Centec album). It too is stamped 400/440v and had no provision for converting to 220v delta, so I stripped it, located the star-point (where 3 windings are joined together), split it and extended the wires out to the connector block. Re-assembled everything, connected the 6 wires into delta and it now runs happily on a 240v VFD. See some photos in my Centec album. It wasn't difficult and was well worth doing. |
Simon Williams 3 | 25/03/2022 10:31:41 |
728 forum posts 90 photos |
Usual Health and Safety warning when working with mains power, but be aware a 400V shock is much nastier than ordinary mains. Never work on live wiring and make sure the connections are understood etc. Dave Sorry Dave, can't let that one pass. 400 volts (line to line) is the same thing as 230 volts (line to neutral). Three phase motor suitable for 400 v line to line in star needs 230 volts line to line in delta so only 133 volts line to neutral. It's the line to neutral (earth) voltage that bites you, you'd have to try hard to grab two phases simultaneously. However VSD outputs aren't necessarily symmetrical about earth. |
SillyOldDuffer | 25/03/2022 11:52:15 |
10668 forum posts 2415 photos | Posted by Simon Williams 3 on 25/03/2022 10:31:41:
Usual Health and Safety warning when working with mains power, but be aware a 400V shock is much nastier than ordinary mains. Never work on live wiring and make sure the connections are understood etc. Dave Sorry Dave, can't let that one pass. 400 volts (line to line) is the same thing as 230 volts (line to neutral). Three phase motor suitable for 400 v line to line in star needs 230 volts line to line in delta so only 133 volts line to neutral. It's the line to neutral (earth) voltage that bites you, you'd have to try hard to grab two phases simultaneously. However VSD outputs aren't necessarily symmetrical about earth. Yeah, it's worth discussing, because I find it confusing too! In my view '400 volts (line to line) is the same thing as 230 volts (line to neutral)' is correct in one sense, but not another. In a star connected motor the neutral point is buried safely inside the machine. The neutral point inside the star isn't the same as mains neutral. Thus, a shock received from a high-voltage VFD is likely to be across two phases, that is 400V, not from one phase to neutral. Domestic mains electrics connect neutral and earth together, so line-to-earth and line-to-neutral are at the same voltage, whilst neutral-to-ground is zero. This earthing arrangement is an effective safety feature because only one wire in the system is hot (live / line). A star motor and high voltage VFD is different. I don't know what the line-to-ground voltage would be in a three wire 3-phase system, because in theory a pure 3-wire system has no neutral or earth. If a 3-wire system were completely isolated from earth and neutral throughout, then I think there'd be no voltage between any of the phases and earth. Don't try that at home folks, because the distribution system mixes 3-wire three phase and single-phase with earth and neutral together, so there's almost certainly some sort of return path from ground. Shocking! Unlike the mains distribution system, a high-voltage VFD circuit might generate each phase in isolation, and also be isolated from the single-phase Line, Neutral and Earth, but I doubt it. Digital converters certainly don't work that way. I suggest it's safer to assume a high-voltage VFD is a 400V hazard when working with one. As always, I'm happy to be put right if I'm wrong. Dave
|
Mike Poole | 25/03/2022 16:17:51 |
![]() 3676 forum posts 82 photos | I doubt that any machine in the home workshop will have a motor large enough to be wound for 415v in Delta but large motors probably in excess of 7.5hp could well be wound for 415v in delta and 690v in star. A motor large enough to to benefit from star-delta starting will be wound for 415v in delta. At work we used some hoist motors that were on the cusp of being wound for being 415v or 230v in delta, as we ran them on a VFD then it was important to check the motor plate and set the VFD to match. These days it is likely that a small motor will be wound for 415v in star but it is not a certainty.
|
Niels Abildgaard | 25/03/2022 17:10:34 |
470 forum posts 177 photos | Old motors can smell awfull after a few minutes in company with a VFD. I have tried it more than once. Edited By Niels Abildgaard on 25/03/2022 17:10:49 |
old mart | 25/03/2022 17:43:54 |
4655 forum posts 304 photos | You may be able to convert to delta, there's nothing to loose if you are careful with insulating and wiring. The alternative is a new motor to go with the VFD, Inverter Drive Supermarket sell both and also have their own "quick start guides" with some VFD'S that they sell. It makes the wiring and programming so easy. The only thing which could be a problem is that you might have problems with the motor shaft diameter and having to make an adaptor plate to mount the motor, I did with the Tom Senior light vertical. |
choochoo_baloo | 25/03/2022 18:21:20 |
![]() 282 forum posts 67 photos | Just managed to sort out the mass of photos on my computer - just created a new "Tom Senior M1" album. Should make future questions more straightforward. Important point I forgot: I'm undertaking this to give my adjustable table feed rates via all the pulleys and gearboxes on the back of the column. 90% of the time I envisage using the powered S-head for the actual cutting. Does this constitute a 'light duty' application? Please see "3 phase column panels" photo, as below. The 3 phase supply is tapped off for the Lo-Vo lamp, with it then going through to the handsome Brook enclosure that had the ON&OFF buttons (cover removed). Can connections be used in some way? Then again the Transwave Layman's guide is clear that the VFD should be wired straight to the motor with no paraphernalia in between.
Edited By choochoo_baloo on 25/03/2022 18:23:00 Edited By choochoo_baloo on 25/03/2022 18:31:53 |
choochoo_baloo | 25/03/2022 18:29:45 |
![]() 282 forum posts 67 photos | One theoretical point a few of you have mentioned, I'd like clarity on: can supplying 240V 3ph (so approx half the rated 3ph voltage) actually harm an induction motor? Or does it simply reduce the torque across all supply freq's supplied by the VFD? NB: I'm quite happy with the physics in terms of their actual operation. The rotating B field induced by the 3 120deg stator winding pairs should behave as intended, just with lower magnitude when flux linking the rotor squirrel cage. Surely?
|
Andrew Johnston | 25/03/2022 18:49:25 |
![]() 7061 forum posts 719 photos | Posted by choochoo_baloo on 25/03/2022 18:29:45:
...can supplying 240V 3ph (so approx half the rated 3ph voltage) actually harm an induction motor? In a word - no. Running a 415V star connected motor with 240V phase to phase simply reduces currents, and hence torque and power, by the square root of 3. Andrew |
choochoo_baloo | 25/03/2022 19:59:02 |
![]() 282 forum posts 67 photos | Posted by Andrew Johnston on 25/03/2022 18:49:25:
Posted by choochoo_baloo on 25/03/2022 18:29:45:
...can supplying 240V 3ph (so approx half the rated 3ph voltage) actually harm an induction motor? In a word - no. Running a 415V star connected motor with 240V phase to phase simply reduces currents, and hence torque and power, by the square root of 3. Andrew Thanks Andrew. Good to know that all it would do is simply 'underpower' the motor. Just for my own understanding - only a minor academic point - wouldn't a star connection actually run at one third* of the motor rated power; whereas in delta each winding receives line voltages (415volts) and operates at full rated power? *using power equation: P /prop V^2 so P /prop (1/sqrt(3))^2 so P /prop (1/3) |
Clive Foster | 25/03/2022 20:58:28 |
3630 forum posts 128 photos | Chapter and verse about running a 415 V star connected motor off at 220 volt VFD here :- **LINK** https://inverterdrive.com/HowTo/240V-Supply-to-a-400V-AC-Motor/ Short version is that its the same as a 415 V VFD up to approximately 29 Hz as there is sufficient voltage to drive enough current into the motor to generate rated torque. Above that there isn't enough voltage to drive the current it needs so torque falls off. If you have room for a larger motor it may well be cheaper to get a more powerful permanent star connected motor and accept the lower peak power speed than seek out a dual star / delta connection one of the right nominal power. Clive |
old mart | 25/03/2022 22:00:34 |
4655 forum posts 304 photos | Your motor is only 1hp and running it from a VFD intended for delta would loose too much power. It is not recommended to have any switch between the VFD and the motor, even an emergency stop, as the VFD could be damaged. An emergency stop in the power supply would not stop the motor as quickly as the switching recommended by the VFD manufacturer. For the price of a Transwave converter, I could buy 2 motors and 2 Schneider VFD's, all the switchgear and wiring, with money left over. Edited By old mart on 25/03/2022 22:05:02 |
duncan webster | 26/03/2022 10:19:25 |
5307 forum posts 83 photos | I once converted a Ferret grinder to run on single phase. The motor manufacturers warned against running older 3 phase motors on vfd, something to do with insulation I think. I used Steinmetz connection, but still had to dig out the star point. Not difficult, but you need to make sure it is safe afterwards |
Please login to post a reply.
Want the latest issue of Model Engineer or Model Engineers' Workshop? Use our magazine locator links to find your nearest stockist!
Sign up to our newsletter and get a free digital issue.
You can unsubscribe at anytime. View our privacy policy at www.mortons.co.uk/privacy
You can contact us by phone, mail or email about the magazines including becoming a contributor, submitting reader's letters or making queries about articles. You can also get in touch about this website, advertising or other general issues.
Click THIS LINK for full contact details.
For subscription issues please see THIS LINK.