An Unexpected Improvement In Part-Off Performance.
In another thread I am describing changing my single phase lathe motor (by rewinding it to three phase) and running of a VFD (variable frequency drive).
Single Phase To Three Phase Rewind - Lathe Uprate
An unanticipated (and much appreciated) outcome was an improvement if part-off performance - here's why (I think) :-
A normal squirrel cage motor responds to increased load by increasing its “slip” – it runs slower – this increases the voltage induced in the squirrel cage bars thus increasing the current in the bars and the reaction torque to the rotating field – the downside is the increased slip also increases the impedance of the squirrel cage which diminishes the current and at some “tipping point” stall occurs suddenly.
Typically slip is 5% - this is no small issue – take for instance when you are parting off – as you apply load (feed) the spindle rpm’s will slow down slightly – which in turn actually increases the force being applied to the part-off blade – so the process is made inherently unstable. Sure the inertia of the system comes to your aid – but “slip” is not your friend.
With the VFD the speed is maintained by reacting to the current draw and Hall-Effect feedback caused by the out of sync squirrel cage current reaction.
The VFD actually increases the output frequency (but not the reference frequency display) to maintain speed.
The V1000 VFD (that I used) has two features :- “slip correction” and “torque correction”, the purpose of these is to maintain the rpm’s of the motor at the “reference frequency” rpm.
Example if I dial in 50Hz. The unloaded 4-Pole motor will turn at 1500rpm but as the load increases it will slow down to 1425 rpm – what the inverter does is increase the output frequency to ±52.6Hz to keep the motor turning at the indicated 50Hz/1500rpm.
Now I hadn’t given this much thought but I found that parting off was much improved by both the increase in deliverable power, torque "smoothness" and speed stability provided by the VFD.
I'm not entirely sure how much I can ascribe to just the increased power but I suspect the rpm stability is significant.
Regards, Ken