electricpete
Electrical
- May 4, 2001
- 16,774
1 - What is typical rise of stator winding temperature by RTD above average winding temperature (by resistance method)?
2 - Your opinion on a specific case:
We have 800 hp 900rpm 60hz vertical squirrel cage motor. Class H insulation. FLA = 111A. Normal load in plant is 93A.
Motor ran hotter than sister motors in the plant. At 93A, RTD's indicated in the neighborhood 210F - 240F with ambient temp 70F - 100F. Sister motors ran in the neighborhood 170F - 200F by RTD with same ambient.
Motor was refurbished. Core loss found at 7 watts per pound. No hot-spots identified by infrared. No repair was performed (not practical without rewind). Motor stator and rotor were cleaned and dried and reassembled.
After reassembly (and a storage period), a shop load test was performed at two points: 93A (normal load) and 111A (FLA).
At 93A
Ambient = 82F
Average winding temp (by resistance) = 165F
Rise = 83F
RTD's indicate 187F - 200F (6 RTD's spread within this range)
At 111A
Ambient = 82F
Average winding temp = 189F
Rise = 107F (similar to original factory test data on sister motor)
RTD'S indicate 212 - 226F
This appears to indicate a slight improvment in temperature compared to in-plant operation (possibly due to cleaning), however still hotter than sister units.
Again - does the difference between RTD's and average winding shed any light on the situation? On the surface it appears that rise during load test is similar to sister motors but RTD's read higher so presumably a larger rise RTD above average for this motor. What would cause that?
Core loss of sisters is unknown. Presumably high core loss would contribute to high temperature but it doesn't seem to me like it woulc contribute to difference between RTD and average, does it?
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Eng-tips forums: The best place on the web for engineering discussions.
2 - Your opinion on a specific case:
We have 800 hp 900rpm 60hz vertical squirrel cage motor. Class H insulation. FLA = 111A. Normal load in plant is 93A.
Motor ran hotter than sister motors in the plant. At 93A, RTD's indicated in the neighborhood 210F - 240F with ambient temp 70F - 100F. Sister motors ran in the neighborhood 170F - 200F by RTD with same ambient.
Motor was refurbished. Core loss found at 7 watts per pound. No hot-spots identified by infrared. No repair was performed (not practical without rewind). Motor stator and rotor were cleaned and dried and reassembled.
After reassembly (and a storage period), a shop load test was performed at two points: 93A (normal load) and 111A (FLA).
At 93A
Ambient = 82F
Average winding temp (by resistance) = 165F
Rise = 83F
RTD's indicate 187F - 200F (6 RTD's spread within this range)
At 111A
Ambient = 82F
Average winding temp = 189F
Rise = 107F (similar to original factory test data on sister motor)
RTD'S indicate 212 - 226F
This appears to indicate a slight improvment in temperature compared to in-plant operation (possibly due to cleaning), however still hotter than sister units.
Again - does the difference between RTD's and average winding shed any light on the situation? On the surface it appears that rise during load test is similar to sister motors but RTD's read higher so presumably a larger rise RTD above average for this motor. What would cause that?
Core loss of sisters is unknown. Presumably high core loss would contribute to high temperature but it doesn't seem to me like it woulc contribute to difference between RTD and average, does it?
=====================================
Eng-tips forums: The best place on the web for engineering discussions.