ArmchairEngineer
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Hello All,
I'm new to this forum so please excuse me if this an inappropriate place for this post
I've got the job of replacing the motor drive on an old piece of machinery.
The motor is a big old shunt wound thing, several hundred amps at about 140Vdc (from memory). It is constructed such that is not possible to insert a resistor in series with the field winding: the field and armature windings are hardwire in parallel.
Speed control was originally achieved by switching the dc bus voltage from low to high so it had two settings: slow and fast.
The load characteristic is such that the torque is proportional to the square of the speed, so at low rpm the torque load is very low.
I am hoping to find a motor controller that can run from the dc bus and allow linear control of the motor speed but I have had difficulty finding a suitable controller. There are several controllers available for series wound or seperately excited motors however the manufacturers are generally not interested in entering into dialogue on whether or not they will work with my shunt wound motor.
My question is this:
- Is there any reason I cannot use a controller designed for a series wound motor with this shunt wound motor? What makes a motor controller designed for a series motor unsuitable for a shunt wound motor? Do they not simply pwm the supply? Please excuse my ignorance on this subject.
Sadly, replacing the motor is not an option.
Thanks in advance for any help on this,
James.
I'm new to this forum so please excuse me if this an inappropriate place for this post
I've got the job of replacing the motor drive on an old piece of machinery.
The motor is a big old shunt wound thing, several hundred amps at about 140Vdc (from memory). It is constructed such that is not possible to insert a resistor in series with the field winding: the field and armature windings are hardwire in parallel.
Speed control was originally achieved by switching the dc bus voltage from low to high so it had two settings: slow and fast.
The load characteristic is such that the torque is proportional to the square of the speed, so at low rpm the torque load is very low.
I am hoping to find a motor controller that can run from the dc bus and allow linear control of the motor speed but I have had difficulty finding a suitable controller. There are several controllers available for series wound or seperately excited motors however the manufacturers are generally not interested in entering into dialogue on whether or not they will work with my shunt wound motor.
My question is this:
- Is there any reason I cannot use a controller designed for a series wound motor with this shunt wound motor? What makes a motor controller designed for a series motor unsuitable for a shunt wound motor? Do they not simply pwm the supply? Please excuse my ignorance on this subject.
Sadly, replacing the motor is not an option.
Thanks in advance for any help on this,
James.