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- Jan 22, 2007
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No, the wire size would not cause this long of a startup time. A loose wirenut could, but I have a feeling you lost a phase somewhere.
Rick Christopherson said:phmade said:I doubt this is the problem; the breaker that powers the phase converter is not tripping.it sounds like high inrush current is tripping the breaker before it gets up to operating speed
To the contrary, inrush current is the root problem, but you need to discover what is causing it. No, the single phase breaker is not tripping nor should it be. The inrush current on the dust collector motor is tripping the 3-pole breaker feeding it.
The current through an induction motor will be at it highest when the motor is running at its slowest. When the motor is stalled, the windings appear as a near short-circuit with the only resistance being the resistance of the copper wire. As the motor begins to turn, the magnetic field in the motor creates additional resistance (called reactance) in the windings that is proportional to the speed of the shaft. So the faster the motor turns, the higher the resistance of the coils, and the lower the amperage. Yeah I know. That's more than you really needed to know.
Michael Kellough said:Thanks for that explanation Rick. I've puzzled over that more than once.
PH is the dust collector the largest motor your starting. Also you said you had a 10HP RPC. Is the the size of the RPC Motor or what the RPC is rated to run.
phmade said:Regarding the startup time, I never accurately measured the startup time until today; therefore, I believe that it did not change; it was only my hopeful imagination. Today, I measured the startup time at 9 seconds before the breaker trips. I believe that the motor is still not up to full RPM at 9 seconds.
phmade said:I also checked the current draw near the breaker and it is over 100amps for that entire startup period. On one startup attempt, the breaker did not trip and the current draw was between 12-13amps.
The motor and impeller spin VERY freely. In fact, it takes about 5 minutes for it to stop spinning after a startup attempt.Check the motor for free rotation. Make sure the impeller or motor shaft spins freely and continues to freewheel after you stop turning it by hand. If it doesn't freewheel easily, then look for obstructions such as dust. If no obstructions, then it is likely that the motor bearings are shot.
The motor did reach full speed on the first attempt and the breaker did not trip. I ran it for about 2 minutes before turning it off. Most of the inlets are blocked, but I have (2) 4" inlets still open. I think that's pretty minor on a dust collector this size.This would suggest that on at least one occasion the motor did reach full speed. Given the amperage of about 50% of full load, then it also suggests the motor was successfully running at no-load (inlets blocked and bearings not seized).
Yes, this is a rotary phase converter with a large idler motor. I purchased it from ARCO electric. Here is the link to the exact product (It's a model B). http://www.arco-electric.com/Product.aspx?ProductID=1You said it was a rotary converter and I assumed that to be correct
My saw does have a computer controlled fence and blade height/angle.As a side note, if your saw has any computerization I would have a concern about the wacky voltage the RPC is producing.
I have NOT been running this saw. I am in the process of installing (3) machines: the dust collector, the tablesaw, and an edgebander. I recently purchased all 3 machines and they have never been run in my shop. The phase converter is also a new purchase to run these machines.You've already been running the tablesaw for quite a while, I assume.