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Discuss Motor starter help. in the Commercial Electrical Advice area at ElectriciansForums.net

Scott_fd2r - A quick contribution - you don't specifically mention it so:

1. Are you providing a single phase supply to this single phase motor? ie: Is the supply derived from a split phase transformer L1-N-L2 (viz 240-0-240V) or are you using L1, L2 and N from a three phase 4 wire 415V supply?

2. What is the supply voltage at the Brook starter L1-L2, L1-N and L2-N before starting, during starting and when running?
 
thanks for the advice, the supply is just single phase live and neutral on a TT earth 230v and neutral. this motor did run last year at a neighbouring farm on a single phase live/neutral supply. i know this for a fact as i connected the supply into the pre wired starter motor setup early last year.

i did find some info on another forum which appears to show the same motor connected in the same way as this one.

lucien nunes, how would you think the motor should be connected internally to achieve a true series start? i have tried to draw how to connect it but keep talking myself out of it. i don't have much experience with single phase motors to be honest. I will hopefully get back to it in the next day or 2 for some more testing.
 
Hang on, 230V?

The plate doesn't make it out to be a dual-voltage motor - it only states 480V - therefore surely it is supposed to start in series and run in parallel on 480V but not at all on 230V. (As opposed to running in series on 480V and in parallel on 240V, with DOL starting, in which case the blank areas on the plate would be stamped 240V 48A). If this is the case, then it is significantly overpowered for the job if it can drive the load at half nameplate voltage, but the speed will be low which if you can confirm with a tacho will be the giveaway.

Re. winding configuration, I would use a low range on a meter to confirm that the start winding is connected between Z1 and Z2 and the centrifugal switch between SW and Z, and that none of those four leads connects to anything else. If so, interchanging the leads SW and Z1 from within the motor will put the start winding in series with the switch, the capacitors and the starter's controlled start-winding output. But the voltage anomaly remains.
 
thanks for the advice, the supply is just single phase live and neutral on a TT earth 230v and neutral. this motor did run last year at a neighbouring farm on a single phase live/neutral supply. i know this for a fact as i connected the supply into the pre wired starter motor setup early last year.

i did find some info on another forum which appears to show the same motor connected in the same way as this one.

lucien nunes, how would you think the motor should be connected internally to achieve a true series start? i have tried to draw how to connect it but keep talking myself out of it. i don't have much experience with single phase motors to be honest. I will hopefully get back to it in the next day or 2 for some more testing.

Scott_fd2r - A quick contribution - you don't specifically mention it so:

1. Are you providing a single phase supply to this single phase motor? ie: Is the supply derived from a split phase transformer L1-N-L2 (viz 240-0-240V) or are you using L1, L2 and N from a three phase 4 wire 415V supply?

2. What is the supply voltage at the Brook starter L1-L2, L1-N and L2-N before starting, during starting and when running?
Scott_fd2r: Good evening from rainy London :)

For clarity could you consider my question again please? What electricity supply is available at the location and what lines and neutrals are provided at the Brook motor starter with their line-neutral voltages please?

Also - is the current motor identical to the one that is being replaced? Just a caution to you that grain mills are a fire and explosion risk so the motor needs to be suited to this application eg flame and spark proof.
 
I think there are some hints:

1. Working voltage of each capacitor is 120-150Vrms and they are in series so as a combination 240/300V which lower than the motor's operating voltage of 480V - thus the start winding energisation voltage is derived from the mid-point of the identical series connected armature windings. And the Z terminal, one end of the start winding, has a neutral connected to it which is switched in the starter. The motor is therefore a capacitor start type not a capacitor start/capacitor run one.

2. This is an antique motor which I believe would have used one of the old-fashioned manually operated handle start and run changeover switches. There is no centrifugal switch internal to the motor which suits it being used in a flameproof/ sparkless application as in a grain miller.

3. 480V supply for the day's when farms only had single phase supplies and sometimes split-phase 240-0-240V thus 480V.

4. Standard nomenclature would make the armature windings start-ends as A1-A2 and A3-A4. So for correct magnetic polarization current flows A1 to A2 and A3 to A4. This explains the connection via the starter of A3 start to A2 end - (note I believe the OP made a mistake when he writes that A1-A3 are connected together via the starter during 'start' phase on the diagram he sketched - he meant A2 and A3.).

So, my attached diagram may be along the right lines. Or something close to this. Ignore first attachment which has a small mistake - look at second one.
 

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To help confirm the winding connections to the 6 terminals could you disconnect the wires from the starter at the motor and remove one spade connector from one of the capacitors to take them out of circuit. Then please take an Ohmmeter on 0-100 Ohms range say and measure:

1. A1-A2 (should be about the same reading as A3-A4)
2. A3-A4
3. Z1-Z2(tens of Ohms)
4. A1-A3(Open circuit O/C)
5. A2-A4(O/C)
6. A1-Z1(O/C)
7. A3-Z1(O/C)
8. A2-Z2(O/C)
9. A4-Z2(O/C)

what I expect shown in brackets.
 
We've taken CSIR as a given, there's no run cap present, but there does seem to be a centrifugal switch. Pending confirmation from the OP, that would appear to be between Z and SW. But all this is immaterial if he has only 230V and a 480V motor. The only salvation would be if the data plate was shoddily stamped and it is actually a 240/480V motor intended for DOL starting on 480V, that can be series-parallel started on 240. Then it would be a certainty that the start winding end should not be on the centre tap but across L & N. I would connect in series across 230V and check the speed. If it is not above nameplate speed at less than full load, it's a 480V motor.
 
Another small error corrected - see attached diagram below - Z connects to L2 during start phase where L1-N-L2 is =+/-240, 0, -/+240V.

I reckon someone has tinkered with the motor terminals to wire the start coil Z between A3 and Z1(Z) instead of between Z1(Z) and Z2; and wired the start capacitor between Z1(Z) and Z2 instead of between A3 and Z2. (Direction of rotation normally reversed by swapping over connections at Z1(Z) and Z2 terminals).

I don't think the internal centrifugal switch - if there is one - is used because the Brooks motor starter mentioned by the OP provides a switched Z line to de-energise the start coil when changeover to run (and armature windings from series to parallel) occur.

There is low torque at start up because of these wiring errors - during start there is next to no current through the start coil and what current that flows is not phase shifted. The motor requires a 480V two wire supply but the starter may need 3 wire for a neutral for the contactor coils and timer - can't say for sure.

It'll struggle too during start phase on 240V two wire because in start phase armature coils only have 120V across them which rises to 240V during run.

Or something along these lines.
 

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I gathered that the starter was existing at the mill but that the motor is being replaced, i.e. the two were not previously used together. The centrifugal switch is not needed with this starter but might have been in use when the motor was in its original installation. My reasoning on the leadouts was based on lead Z having a push-on receptacle connected directly to the capacitor, whereas the others have forks / rings for the terminal studs, making it less likely that the connection between the capacitor and Z had been altered.

But we may be flogging a horse of the wrong voltage here. We need to clarify the motor's run voltage. There are a couple of ways to do this including measuring the magnetising VARs, but at half voltage the slip will be very high and the speed well below rated. What do other people think about the data on the plate and the significance of the start capacitor voltage / connection to the run winding midpoint? I had overlooked the cap voltage until Marconi pointed it out.
 
Scott_fd2r: Turning attention to the starter, you might find the attached wiring diagram for the Brook Crompton Single Phase Series Parallel motor starter 3SP1CHS useful.

I obtained it from Brook Crompton Technical Services.

See page 8 of this link for further details should you need to order a new one or spares for it:

https://www.yumpu.com/en/document/read/55037547/this-is-crompton-controls
 

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Evening guys. I had replied last night but cant see my post anywhere. Dont know whither it went on or not.
Just for info this starter and motor were used together it started and ran without issue. Since then they were disconnected and not marked so i thought the problem to be a wiring mixup but i cant see how else is could be connected using 5 wires. It was definitely connected to a single phase line neutral 230v supply before. It could be that the load was less so this issue didn't show up? The motor and starter are now on a different mill, but it looks very similar in size with pulleys the same size.

today i started the motor by spinning the mill slightly first then starting it. When it is up and running it is doing 1490rpm with the mill running. So pretty much spot on what it should be.
I removed the belts and started the motor to prove the centrifugal switch. I tested between bottom right terminal and A3. Which is closed circuit at startup then open circuit when it reaches speed. I can actually hear the switch open.
This could be useless info but the cables disappearing into the motor are in sleeves cables z2+sw go in the same sleeve an head towards the fan end of the motor. A2+A4+z1 go in a sleeve towards the front of the motor. The rest appear to go in another sleeve.
i did the resistance tests with the supply cables disconnect but have left the paper in my jacket pocket. I will post these readings later.
hope that makes some sort of sense.
 
Well it sounds like you are in luck with the voltage, as I can't believe it would slip only 10rpm at half voltage even off load. But it's daft for the plate not to give 240 / 480V options with the two different currents as is normal on a reconfigurable motor. Obviously series/parallel starting is available at 240V but at the nameplate 480V it would have to be DOL as the windings would already be hard-wired in series for running.

So just fix the start winding connections so that the cap and winding are in series, optionally bypass the switch if you trust the starter, and personally I think the start circuit should be across full 230V mains, not connected to the main winding midpoint. Marconi (& anybody else out there) what say you?
 
Scott_fd2r: I have now studied the blueprint for the Brook Crompton Series Parallel starter and arrived at the following advice:

(see attached diagram here and the B_C blueprint in my last message).

1. The motor is CSIR with an integral centrifugal switch - this switch is to be used as it is the reliable way to de-energise the start winding Z at the appropriate speed - so we DO NOT use the starter to switch in/out the Z winding. The connection from the motor Z terminal to the starter is INCORRECT and should be removed.

2. The motor is wired for series-start and parallel run. I will come on to the 480V question at the end. Wire the motor terminals as in the attachment below.

3. The motor is connected to the starter by 4 conductors viz A1, A2, A3 and A4. These connect to starter as A1 to U1, A2 to U2, A3 to U5 and A4 to U6. Top right wiring diagram on blueprint refers CSIR Series 1.

4. Now study the note numbered 6 on the blueprint - read it very carefully and make the connections as in para 3 above, and CONNECT a link between 62 and 54 on Run(RN) contactor - or check that one is there already - this link is required because the motor is using its centrifugal switch.

5. Now study wiring schematic of blueprint above the notes and make sure that at the overload the wiring is done in accordance with the note - 'or cap start/Ind run disconnecvt from 2 and connected to 4.

6. Make sure incoming L and N go to 1 and 5 on contactor C.

7. Check/adjust timer delay so that changeover from series to paralle occurs BEFORE centrifugal switch opens.

8. Energised by a 240V 2 wire supply the motor in the run state will produce less mechanical power than on a 480V 2 wire supply. I'd estimate 25 per cent less so about 2.5kW output. Power being proportional to Vsquared or Isquared. You can calculate it roughly by the product of supply voltage and motor current times a nominal power factor of say 0.8.

9. Caution - the capacitors may need replacing.
 

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Marconi.
Today i rearranged the cables almost identical to your drawing. However i ended up using the starter to switch the neutral as cables i have coming from the motor didn't allow for exactly what you have drawn.
the cable Z goes from the capacitor and straight into the motor. I have attached a picture or how i have it connected now and it seems to be working as it should start up torque is far better. Timer is set at about 3 or 4 seconds which gives a smooth changeover. Is there any reason why i shouldnt be using the starter to switch out the neutral?

On start up its drawing about 38 amps and settles to around 15 when running on load.

if the rollers are squeezed together too quickly After it reaches full speed the contactors drop out. It doesnt trip the overload they just stop. I never actually checked the voltage to see if it is causing a voltage drop to de energies the coil i doubt that is the case though. Its not an issue as the rollers can be squeezed together slowly giving the idle roller time to get upto speed. I just wondered if there was an obvious reason for this?
 

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