* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Electrical Measurement Safety
History of electric power transmission wikipedia , lookup
Power engineering wikipedia , lookup
Resistive opto-isolator wikipedia , lookup
Electrification wikipedia , lookup
Switched-mode power supply wikipedia , lookup
Buck converter wikipedia , lookup
Stray voltage wikipedia , lookup
Three-phase electric power wikipedia , lookup
Power inverter wikipedia , lookup
Opto-isolator wikipedia , lookup
Brushless DC electric motor wikipedia , lookup
Mains electricity wikipedia , lookup
Electric motor wikipedia , lookup
Alternating current wikipedia , lookup
Power electronics wikipedia , lookup
Rectiverter wikipedia , lookup
Voltage optimisation wikipedia , lookup
Induction motor wikipedia , lookup
Brushed DC electric motor wikipedia , lookup
Pulse-width modulation wikipedia , lookup
Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 1 Motors are the number one consumer of electrical power ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 2 Power consumption based on size ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 3 Standard motor operating conditions ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 4 Special purpose motor operating conditions ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 5 Motor failure ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 6 Troubleshooting fuses ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 7 Taking motor voltage measurements ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 8 Measuring motor voltage unbalance ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 9 Measuring motor control circuit transformer ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 10 Measuring motor current ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 11 Measuring temperature ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 12 Measuring motor insulation ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 13 Megohmmeter reading interpretation ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 14 Motor power measurements ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 15 Testing motor capacitors ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 16 Electrical measurements on adjustable speed drives ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 17 Making safe measurements • Voltage ratings • Category ratings • Safe practices • De-energize circuits • Use protective gear • Do not exceed instrument voltage and category ratings • Use 3-point test method • Test known live circuit • Test target circuit • Test known live circuit again • Avoid holding the meter ©2004 Fluke Corporation Measurement category Working voltage (dc or ac-rms to gnd) Peak impulse transient (20 repetitions) Test source (Ohm = V/A) CAT I 600V 2500V 30 ohm source CAT I 1000V 4000V 30 ohm source CAT II 600V 4000V 12 ohm source CAT II 1000V 6000V 12 ohm source CAT III 600V 6000V 2 ohm source CAT III 1000V 8000V 2 ohm source CAT IV 600V 8000V 2 ohm source Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 18 Adjustable speed drive – theory ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 19 Pulse-width modulated inverter Theory of operation • DC converter section supplies constant DC level • Rms motor voltage is varied by the width of the PWM pulse • Motor drive signal frequency is controlled by the modulation frequency ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 20 Motors – measurement 1: Low voltage Low voltages • Check for voltage drops across connectors, or • Check for heated connections Analog meters • Reads the average voltage of the modulation frequency of the PWM drive • Meter may not have IEC-61010 safety rating Digital multimeter • Current DMMS read higher than analog meter on PWM drives because they responding to the entire frequency spectrum of the drive signal. • These DMM are not giving inaccurate readings. • Exception: New DMMs that include low-pass filters ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 21 Motors – measurement 1: Low voltage Using the ASD display 230 volts (calculated) Using a true-rms meter 247 volts 20 KHz B/W Using an averaging meter 230 volts @ 5KHz B/W Using a voltage tester 227 volts @ 400 Hz B/W Using an oscilloscope 255 (avg) volts @ 20MHz B/W Using a power quality analyzer 253 (avg) volts @ 20MHz B/W 243 volts @ 3KHz B/W 226 volts @ 60 Hz Using an analog meter 223 volts @ 100 Hz ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 22 Motors - measurement 2: Voltage & current unbalance • Check for voltage unbalance (< 2 %) first, then • Check for current unbalance (< 10 %) Max. Deviation (V or I) % (V or I) Imbalance = X 100 Average (V or I) For example: 449 1 470 +462 1381 ©2004 Fluke Corporation 2 1381 3 = 460 3 11 460 Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting X 100 = 2.39 % 23 PWM drives – measurement 3: Overvoltage reflections at the motor terminals Normal PWM waveform Leading edge of normal PWM pulse PWM waveform with reflected voltages Leading edge of PWM pulse with reflected voltage (ringing) ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 24 PWM drives – measurement 3: Overvoltage reflections at the motor terminals Overvoltage reflections at the motor terminals. • Damages the motor windings • Shorten cable if possible • If motor is worth repairing, consider rewinding with better insulated wire such as TZ Q (by Phelps Dodge) • If new motor is required, use one that meets NEMA MG11993 Part 31 specifications (can tolerate sustained voltage peaks of 1600 V and rise times >100 ns) • Use filtering if none of the above is feasible • Try to mitigate overvoltages to <900 V for standard motors ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 25 PWM drives – measurement 3: Overvoltage reflections at the motor terminals Possible remedies for overvoltage reflections ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 26 PWM drives – measurement 4: Motor shaft voltages Bearing currents: occur when shaft voltages exceed insulating capability of the grease • Higher breakdown voltages of 8 -15 V occur due to the fast edge of the PWM pulse • First signs of this problem = noise and overheating caused by pitting and loosened metal fragments • Use an oscilloscope to view shaft voltages measured between the motor shaft and the grounded frame using stranded wire or a carbon brush ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 27 PWM drives – measurement 4: Motor shaft voltages Bearing currents: occur when shaft voltages exceed insulating capability of the grease • Make the measurement after the motor has heated up • Simplest solution is to lower the carrier frequency to less than 10 kHz, or down to 4 kHz if possible • Shaft grounding devices, bearing insulation, faraday shield in the motor, conductive grease or filtering between the ASD and the motor ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 28 PWM drives – measurement 4: Motor shaft voltages Bearing currents: occur when shaft voltages exceed insulating capability of the grease • Make the measurement after the motor has heated up • Simplest solution is to lower the carrier frequency to less than 10 kHz, or down to 4 kHz if possible • Shaft grounding devices, bearing insulation, faraday shield in the motor, conductive grease or filtering between the ASD and the motor ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 29 PWM drives – measurement 5: Leakage currents (common mode noise) • Leakage currents flow in capacitive coupling between the stator windings and frame ground. The faster rise times and switching frequencies of the PWM pulse can increase leakage • Interferes with 4-20 ma control signals and PLC communications • Increased leakage currents pose potential safety problems and may cause ground fault protection relays to trip ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 30 PWM drives – measurement 5: Leakage currents (common mode noise) • To measure, place current clamp around all three motor conductors at the inverter output • Use an oscilloscope to examine the CMN waveform • Possible solutions: special EMI suppression cables, isolation transformers on the line input, or a common mode choke ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 31 PWM drives – measurement 6: Testing the IGBT output waveshape 1. Connect the scope common lead to the dc+ bus and measure each of the three phases at the inverter’s motor output terminals. Check for clean-edged square waves with no visible pulse noise. Verify that all three phases have the same appearance. 2. Check the negative conducting IGBTs by connecting the common lead to the dc- bus and performing step 1 on each phases at the inverter’s motor output terminals. ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 32 PWM drives – measurement 7: Testing the IGBT outputs for leakage • Measure voltage from earth ground to the inverter’s motor output terminals with the drive powered on and speed set to zero (motor stopped). • If leaky, the voltage will be elevated 3 or 4 times normal. • Perform this measurement on a known good drive to determine what is normal for that drive. ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 33 PWM drives – measurement 8: ASD “trip” problems – overloading Cause of overloading = too much motor current • Verify motor load is not causing the problem • Check for excessive current unbalance (possible shorted phase windings) • Verify ASD trip points are set correctly • Is dc bus voltage being regulated properly? • Leaky capacitors (too much ripple, too little inrush current) • Link inductor OK? (waveform different or same on both sides?) ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 34 PWM drives – measurement 9: ASD “trip” problems – overvoltage • Check for high line voltage and/or long term variations • Check for line transients • Lightening protection in place? • Proper wiring and grounding? • Isolation from transient producing loads? • Verify ASD trip points are set correctly • Is load regenerative (cranes, elevators)? If so, is dynamic braking installed and working properly? • Is dc bus voltage being regulated properly? • Leaky capacitors (too much ripple, too little inrush current) • Link inductor OK? (waveform different or same on both sides?) ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 35 PWM drives – measurement 9: ASD “trip” problems – overvoltage Overvoltage transient capture with a power quality analyzer. ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 36 PWM drives – measurement 10: ASD “trip” problems – undervoltage • Check for low line voltage and/or long term variations • Verify ASD trip points are set correctly • Is dc bus voltage being regulated properly (dc link capacitors and/or reactor) • Check for voltage sags ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 37 PWM drives – measurement 10: ASD “trip” problems – undervoltage Check for flat topping of the input voltage ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 38 PWM drives – bonus measurement: ASDs and IEEE-519 measurements Check for VTHD < 5 % at the point of common coupling (PCC), not the ASD ©2004 Fluke Corporation Check power factor. Utilities may start charging for distortion power factor. Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting Check for ITHD < ? % at PCC, not the ASD (% depends on short circuit current ratio of PCC) 39 PQ troubleshooting: Transformer solutions – Three phase filter traps Series resonant tuned LC shunt filter with series line reactor. ©2004 Fluke Corporation Series resonant tuned LC shunt filter. Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 40 PQ troubleshooting solutions: Active harmonic compensation devices • Samples load current for harmonic content • Generates harmonic frequencies demanded by load • Source supplies 60 Hz only • Current distortions typically less than 5 % ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 41 ©2004 Fluke Corporation Introduction to Motor Troubleshooting 42