ebarba
Mechanical
- Oct 3, 2002
- 82
Hello all,
a customer complained one of our vibrating-table machines was not working. These are reactive machines - i.e. two-degree-of-freedom systems - where the vibrating table is the second DOF and sits on springs (circular steel bars). The bars are attached to a structure (first DOF) where the vibrators are clamped. Finally, this structure then sits on a series of more flexible springs that serve as legs, resting on the floor.
The sieve shaker has a natural frequency very close to the operating frequency of the vibrators, so it vibrates while the structure and the vibrators are almost vibration free.
Upon inspection, we found that:
[ul]
[li]the original working frequency (set by a VFD) did not change at all since we originally shipped the unit[/li]
[li]the customer removed some accessories from the second DOF (sieve shaker) amounting to 4% of the original mass of said second DOF[/li]
[li]the operational frequency of the machine had INCREASED about 25% since we shipped the unit (i.e. we had to run the vibrators 25% faster in order for the machine to work correctly).[/li]
[li]no physical damage was found anywhere[/li]
[/ul]
We shipped back the machine with a new VFD configuration (i.e. higher operating frequency), but we haven't found any explanation for what happened. The decrease in mass cannot explain an increase of 25% in the operating frequency, at least not according to our calculations.
Any ideas?
Thanks!
a customer complained one of our vibrating-table machines was not working. These are reactive machines - i.e. two-degree-of-freedom systems - where the vibrating table is the second DOF and sits on springs (circular steel bars). The bars are attached to a structure (first DOF) where the vibrators are clamped. Finally, this structure then sits on a series of more flexible springs that serve as legs, resting on the floor.
The sieve shaker has a natural frequency very close to the operating frequency of the vibrators, so it vibrates while the structure and the vibrators are almost vibration free.
Upon inspection, we found that:
[ul]
[li]the original working frequency (set by a VFD) did not change at all since we originally shipped the unit[/li]
[li]the customer removed some accessories from the second DOF (sieve shaker) amounting to 4% of the original mass of said second DOF[/li]
[li]the operational frequency of the machine had INCREASED about 25% since we shipped the unit (i.e. we had to run the vibrators 25% faster in order for the machine to work correctly).[/li]
[li]no physical damage was found anywhere[/li]
[/ul]
We shipped back the machine with a new VFD configuration (i.e. higher operating frequency), but we haven't found any explanation for what happened. The decrease in mass cannot explain an increase of 25% in the operating frequency, at least not according to our calculations.
Any ideas?
Thanks!