magoo2
Electrical
- May 17, 2006
- 857
When you reduce voltage to an induction motor, how much energy savings will result?
To my way of thinking, supply voltages are a usually little higher than motor nameplate voltages (like 480 V supply with 460 V motors, or 4160 V supply with 4000 V motors). Looks like about 4% higher.
There will be some voltage drop to the motors, but probably not 4%, maybe 2%. This means that the nominal voltage at the motor is 2% high. If I reduce the voltage (through transformer taps) such that I get rated voltage at the motor, I should save some energy.
I'm trying to find how low can I go with voltage and still save energy. I'm assuming that generally the motor will not be fully loaded.
Are there any good references or links dealing with this topic?
To my way of thinking, supply voltages are a usually little higher than motor nameplate voltages (like 480 V supply with 460 V motors, or 4160 V supply with 4000 V motors). Looks like about 4% higher.
There will be some voltage drop to the motors, but probably not 4%, maybe 2%. This means that the nominal voltage at the motor is 2% high. If I reduce the voltage (through transformer taps) such that I get rated voltage at the motor, I should save some energy.
I'm trying to find how low can I go with voltage and still save energy. I'm assuming that generally the motor will not be fully loaded.
Are there any good references or links dealing with this topic?