Friday, December 21, 2012

Motor Control Diagrams

Direct on line starter

Direct-on-line starter

 

In the simplest case the motor is

connected directly with a contactor. The

combination of motor protection and

cable protection (fuse) is called a motor

starter (MSC = Motor Starter

Combination).

By applying the full mains voltage to the

motor windings, DOL starting may

produce large starting currents which

may result in troublesome voltage

changes. Direct-on-line starting

three-phase motors must not cause

interference voltage changes in the

public utility grid. This requirement is

generally fulfilled if the apparent power

of a three-phase asynchronous motor

does not exceed 5.2 kVA or its startup

current does not exceed 60 A.

With a mains voltage of 400 V and 8 times

the starting current, this corresponds to

a rated motor current of around 7.5 A and

thus a motor rating of 4 kW.

The motor rating denotes the mechanical

output of the motor at the shaft.

Motor starters

Star-delta starter

 

This is the most popular and commonly

used starting method for motor ratings

> 4 kW (400 V).

 

Electronic motor starter (EMS) and soft

starter

These enable the soft and low-noise

starting of the motor. This eliminates

interference producing current peaks

and jerks during switching. The startup

and deceleration phase of the motor can

also be time-controlled depending on the

load.

 

Frequency inverter

This enables time-controlled motor

starting, motor braking and operation

with infinitely variable motor speeds.

Depending on the application, different

types of frequency inverters are used:

– with the voltage/frequency control

(U/f) or vector control for

frequency-controlled motor operation,

– with vector control or servo control for

high speed accuracy and additional

torque adjustment.

Associated circuit diagrams