I have need of some vfds but have hesitating in buying.
A large part of the hesitation is due to the enormous difference in pricing that I can find.
I can buy from NA name brand distribution and its XX$.
Or dig around and find the non name brand NA distribution (there are a few) and its 65% (or so) of XX$.
Or mr jeff's emporium and its running 45 - 50% of XX$.
Digging around at Alie or Alib - - - 25 - 35% of XX$.
How does one ascertain the quality of the product?
(Verbiage seems quite the same in all the levels.
Brand names seem like a joke as most are built in China anyway.
So how does the non experienced find at least decent product (without buying stuff that will be junk pdq)?)
TIA
I'm not opposed to the noname VFDs I see on eBay. Just last week my neighbor purchased one to run his 10HP air compressor. It took a bit to get it to run the machine, as acceleration time and other parameters caused it to overcurrent. I got that to operate pretty well. They have been improving them, as they get more intellectual property from the name brand vendors that build their units in China or other offshore operations.
I've also had very good luck purchasing used VFDs from facebook/craigslist and eBay. The big thing, first find the manual online, if you can't, don't buy the VFD. About the only brand I've run into not finding the manual was Allen Bradley/Rockwell Automation, they seem to purge their older obsolete units from their web page.
Also make sure it is a 200v class electronics, as you can't use the 400v class in your home unless you have a 440VAC power source. And then make sure it can run the HP of your motor. They round the 746 watts per HP up to 750, so a .75KW drive is for 1HP motor. 2HP will use a 1.5KW model, 3HP will use a 2.2KW model. That information is in the instruction manual, first few pages.
If you can find the keywords "sensorless vector drive" or some buzz words like "magnetic flux vector control" in the eBay auction listing, that should be a good drive.
There are some Mitsubishi drives on seeing that are brand new and under $100USD for 1HP motors.
If the eBay seller of a new low cost VFD can't give you an english PDF manual for their VFD, don't buy it. You need to review the manual to see what program features it has, and if your stop/fwd/rev switch topology will work.
I've found that Mitsubishi, Hitachi, Teco brand VFD, that have 3 phase input terminals, will operate with single phase. I know there are some brands that will fault out as they monitor for missing phase inputs.
Typically above 3HP/2.2KW VFD, you derate them for single phase input, and purchase a VFD of 2x the KW/HP capability so the input diodes don't burn out. I have a 7.5HP lathe, that has been powered with a 10HP Mitsubishi drive since 2004, with zero issues. But I don't ever use the full 7.5HP of the machine. I have tripped it out on undervoltage faults when I set the acceleration too short. My 12x24 lathe has a 2HP motor on it, with the belt settings at mid range. I can dial the spindle RPM down to 10RPM, and run a 5/8" tap or die on it (cutting stainless/mild steel), and it does not stall. I have a remote with the stop fwd, and speed potentiometer, close by.
If you buy a cheap new VFD, install it right away, and test it. See if it fails. If you got it off eBay, then you can get a refund for a defective drive. There's a 30 day return period. Even if the seller say's they don't take returns, eBay's policy overrides that.
Do not mount the VFD on the milling machine, the vibrations during some cutting operations will shake the parts off the internal circuit cards.
Hope these comment help.