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- From: roche@cs.rochester.edu (James Roche)
- Subject: rec.woodworking Electric Motors Frequently asked Questions
- Message-ID: <woodworking/motors_878063374@cs.rochester.edu>
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- Sender: roche@cs.rochester.edu (James Roche)
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- Organization: University of Rochester Computer Science Dept
- Date: Tue, 28 Oct 1997 18:29:44 GMT
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- Archive-name: woodworking/motors
- Last-modified: 3/17/94
-
- Copyright (c) 1994 by James J. Roche. All rights reserved.
-
- This article answers many of the frequently asked questions about electric
- motors.
-
-
- Motors:
-
- There are many kinds of motors, but this article considers only two
- kinds used frequently in woodworking tool applications: universal AC/DC
- motors and single-phase induction motors. Universal motors have brushes
- and commutators and are used for portable tools like routers, skilsaws,
- and electric drills. Single-phase induction motors have no brushes,
- run only on AC electrical power, and are usually found on stationary
- tools such as table saws, drill presses, planers, and jointers.
- There are exceptions to this: some stationary tools use universal
- motors.
-
- Horsepower: Motor horsepower is the most misunderstood (and misused)
- electric motor rating. Neither motor, universal or induction, produces
- usable horsepower unless it is slowed down (by applied mechanical load)
- from no-load speed. For induction motors, this slowdown is called
- "slip", and the horsepower "developed" by a motor increases with slip
- (to a simple approximation). This is why induction motors are
- typically rated at 3450 rpm (two pole motor) or 1750 rpm (four pole
- motor). The rating speed allows for slip from the "synchronous"
- speeds of 3600 and 1800 rpm, respectively. Universal motors do not
- have a synchronous speed, but have a maximum no-load speed that depends
- upon the voltage applied to the motor.
-
- Most motors can put out a lot more maximum horsepower than they can
- sustain continuously. By forcing more mechanical load on the motor,
- slowdown is increased and so therefore is the output horsepower.
- Mechanically, horsepower is torque times rpm, and increasing the
- mechanical load means that the rpm is slowed slightly and the drag
- torque is increased to obtain more torque times rpm. Electrically,
- horsepower is volts times amps, and by conservation of energy, the
- mechanical output horsepower must be balanced by electrical input
- horsepower. Since the voltage is relatively constant, this means that
- as a motor is loaded, the input current increases. But the electrical
- winding impedance has a resistive component, so that higher current
- means more power dissipated in the windings. In fact, the motor
- windings heat up proportional to the square of the motor current.
- Except for specially designed motors, the current that a motor can
- sustain continuously without burning out its windings is a fraction
- of the current at maximum load.
-
- Unscrupulous vendors sometimes publish maximum "developed" horsepower
- to make their products seem more capable than they really are.
- Developed horsepower may be two to five times the continuous duty
- rating of a motor. Such products should be examined to discover the
- continuous duty rating to compare with other, more conservatively
- rated products.
-
- When the talk is of developed horsepower, the meaning is "peak" which
- for an induction motor is typically the local peak of the torque curve
- near synchronous speed. A typical induction motor torque curve is:
-
- |
- |
- .
- |.
- | .
- Dev. _ . .
- | . . .
- | . . .
- | . . .
- | . .
- Rated _ . .
- |
- | .
- |
- | .
- |
- Torque | .
- |
- |
- | .
- |__________________________________________________________._
- |
- 0 RPM 1800 or 3600
-
-
- As you can see, the curve is very steep in the operating region and in
- fact, the observed operation is typically that once you load the motor
- past the local maximum torque, the speed jumps to the corresponding
- point on the initial portion of the curve or simply stops. The actual
- operation depends upon the shape of the curve near 0 RPM.
-
- The Rated HP is typically the torque level at which the motor can be run
- continuously without exceeding the temperature at which the winding
- insulation beaks down. Since there is thermal mass involved, you can
- operate the motor at higher than rated torque for less than 100% of
- the time and not exceed this temperature if the motor is cool preceding
- the run etc. etc. etc.
-
- Typically, two motors with different rated HP develop different HP in a
- ration close to the same as the difference in rating.
-
-
- The story is somewhat different for a universal motor such as is used on
- most hand held tools. In these motors, for a given input voltage, the
- torque goes up as the speed goes down. The more you load them, the slower
- they run until they stall, at which point their torque is a maximum.
- In this case, the developed horsepower is a the point along the torque
- curve where the speed X torque is a maximum. As with the induction motor,
- the rated horsepower means you can run the motor there at 100% duty cycle.
- Again, you can load the motor more and it will produce more torque but you
- may only do this on a limited basis.
-
- The final word is heat. If you exceed the winding insulation temperature
- rating, you will fail the insulation and ruin the motor ( or pop the
- thermal cutout if so equipped).
-
-
-
- Application areas: Universal motors are compact, have high starting
- torque, can run at high rpm, and deal well with rapidly varying
- loads. They are often used with triac or thyristor speed controls.
- This makes them ideal for portable power tools. Single-phase
- induction motors are efficient, have a limited rpm selection,
- are relatively heavy and bulky, and are almost maintenance-free.
- They work well in stationary tools that run at one rpm or that have
- a variable-speed transmission.
-
- Voltage: Both kinds of motors are supplied in popular mains voltages
- (115 or 230) but only induction motors are supplied with winding
- taps that allow either voltage to be selected. As far as the motor
- is concerned, there is no difference in efficiency when selecting
- either 115 or 230 volts. This is because such motors have two
- identical sets of windings that are connected in parallel for the lower
- voltage and in series for the higher. Neither connection results
- in the individual windings seeing a different voltage. However,
- inadequate wiring can make a difference to motor operation, because
- higher current at 115 volts may give unacceptable wiring voltage drops
- in some shops or garages. Some wiring voltage drop is expected and
- built into the motor rating. Nominal pole transformer output (to
- your house) is about 120/240 volts. Motors are rated for 115/230
- volt operation, which allows for 5/10 volts wiring voltage drop.
- More voltage drop than this can cause low starting torque and
- overheating at rated load.
-
- 115 or 230 volt operation makes no difference to your power company
- either. The watt-hour meter at your electrical entry measures watts
- regardless of the voltage used. Your power company does not give
- you a single watt for free, and your PUC (Public Utility Commission)
- won't let the power company charge more than the legal rates.
- Watt-hour meter accuracy is a matter of law in most States.
-
- Current: Motors have a nominal current rating which is supposed to be
- the current at rated horsepower and rated voltage. A motor will not
- draw exactly rated current except in the unlikely circumstance that
- the voltage applied is exactly the rated voltage and the load applied
- is exactly the rated horsepower. As a matter of fact, most woodworking
- tools spend much of their life spinning without applied load and drawing
- only a small fraction of nameplate rated current. When the tool begins
- to cut, motor current varies widely depending upon cutting load. In
- some tools which have relatively small motors, motor current may approach
- several times rated current as the tool is momentarily loaded close
- to stall or breakdown torque. An exception to this wide variation
- would be something like the motor driving the fan on a dust
- collection system; such motors operate at about rated horsepower all
- the time because the fan presents a constant load.
-
- For both universal and single-phase induction motors, the full-load
- current is given by
-
- I = (746 * hp) / (eff * pf * voltage)
-
- where eff is efficiency, pf is power factor, and the others are
- obvious. In AC systems, the voltage and current waveforms are
- (nominally) sine waves and may differ in phase from each other
- by an angle called the phase angle. There are 360 phase angle
- degrees in one sinusoidal cycle. Power factor is the cosine of
- the phase angle, and for motors this angle is normally between
- zero and 90 degrees, current lagging voltage. In DC systems,
- there is no phase angle, and power factor is defined as 1.0.
-
- Typical values for single-phase induction motors running at 115
- volts AC are pf = 0.8 and eff = 0.9. This gives a rule-of-thumb
- value for amps/horsepower at 115 volts of
-
- 9 amps / horsepower
-
- This figure is probably OK for rule-of-thumb comparison of induction
- and universal motors or reasonability checks as long as you
- remember that it is based on typical values.
-
- If you are contemplating operating a 115 volt universal motor
- on DC, performance should be slightly better at 115 volts DC
- than it was on AC. The proper voltage to use is 115 volts DC.
- This is because AC voltages are given as RMS values, which
- are their power-equivalent DC values. The tool will actually
- endure less voltage stress under DC operation because the
- peak voltage experienced under DC is 0.707 times the AC peak
- voltage. Switches and contacts, however, may not last as long.
-
- Starting current can be as much as ten times rated motor current.
- This is usually not a problem for the circuit breaker feeding the
- motor, because modern circuit breakers are typically rated to trip
- instantaneously at about ten times breaker nameplate rating. For
- currents less than the instantaneous value, the breaker trips due
- to internal heater elements which mimic the heatup characteristics
- of the wiring the breaker is supposed to protect. Since starting
- currents last only a second or two (unless the motor is jammed),
- motors usually will not trip circuit breakers on starting current if
- the breaker is rated at higher current than the motor nameplate
- current. This may not be true if you start the motor on a circuit
- which is already loaded close to rating.
-
- A motor may trip your circuit breaker on time-overcurrent (the
- heaters) even if the motor nameplate current rating appears to be
- within the breaker rating. This can happen if you continuously
- overload the motor; motor current will then be several times the
- nameplate rating. There may be other signs of this. The motor may
- become extremely hot (spit sizzles on the casing). This is General
- Electric's way of telling you to slow down.
-
- Breakdown torque: Single-phase induction motors, unless they are
- designed for torquemotor operation, have a "breakdown" torque rating.
- This refers to the motor torque-versus-rpm curve, which has a peak
- torque somewhere between zero rpm and rated rpm. If the motor is
- running and load is applied, the motor slows and torque increases
- until breakdown torque is reached. At this point, further rpm
- reduction causes a reduction of motor-supplied torque, and the motor
- rpm reduces rapidly to zero (it "breaks down"). This is why a saw,
- for instance, appears to suddenly stall as it is overloaded.
-
- Ventilation: Most motors have one of two kinds of ventilation: fan-
- cooled open housing, or totally enclosed, fan-cooled (TEFC) housing.
- In the former type, a fan attached to the motor shaft draws air
- through the internal parts of the motor and blows it out of
- ventilation slots cut into the motor housing. Most universal motors
- are of this type because of the need to cool the brushes and to
- exhaust brush carbon dust and commutator copper fragments. In the
- TEFC type, the motor housing is completely enclosed and no air
- gets to the internal parts of the motor. Instead, internal heat
- is conducted through the metal housing to fins, where air blown
- by an external fan removes the heat. Some induction motors have
- this kind of (more expensive) ventilation and they are often used
- in applications where excessive dust or flammable conditions exist.
-
- Drive gear: Surprisingly enough, even though many people will look
- at motor horsepower rating, they often completely ignore the drive
- gear attaching the motor to its load. The drive gear is often a clue
- to the real power rating of the motor-drive combination. It's
- difficult to determine the rating of enclosed gears, but v-belts
- can give an immediate visual clue. While larger pulleys increase
- a v-belt rating, a nominal rule of thumb is about one horsepower
- per 1/2 inch v-belt. Two 5/8 v-belts on large pulleys may be good
- for 4 or 5 horsepower. One small belt on a motor which "develops"
- 3 horsepower is cause for some suspicion. Actual belt drive ratings
- can be found in manufacturers handbooks (see Gates, for example) or
- in Machinery's Handbook.
-
- Motor Starters: Motor starters are big relays mounted in expensive
- metal boxes with heater overloads matched to the motor they start.
- They serve two purposes: 1) The relay contacts are heavy duty and
- are rated for the motor starting current. Delicate contacts, such
- as those on a pressure switch, will fail if used directly to
- start a large motor. Delicate contacts are therefore wired to
- operate the motor starter relay rather than the motor. 2) Wall-
- mounted circuit breakers are designed to protect building wiring,
- not motors plugged into wall receptacles. If your electrical box
- circuit breaker trips before your motor burns up, it is incidental,
- not on purpose. However, motor starters are designed to trip on
- heater overload before the motor they start burns up.
-
- How much horsepower: This question is often asked and has no easy
- answer. This is because the amount of horsepower you need depends
- upon your patience, your preferences, and the way you use the
- machine in question. Here are some pros and cons. A larger
- horsepower motor (and associated drive gear) has a thicker shaft
- and is typically more robust than a smaller horsepower motor. It
- responds to overloads and hard cuts more strongly, and may not stall
- in your application. It does not use very much more power, since
- electric motors use only power demanded plus some motor losses (which
- are somewhat larger for higher rated motors). On the down side, the
- initial expense of the motor and drive gear is greater. Higher
- horsepower often requires 230 volt wiring. The motor and associated
- drive gear and mountings are heavier. A smaller horsepower motor
- is cheaper, lighter, and may run on 115 volts. For a careful worker,
- the torque supplied may be sufficient. On the down side, the tool
- may stall more often and wet wood may be impossible to cut. The
- drive gear may be less robust and may require more maintenance. If
- the tool is operated in overload, the 115 volt circuit breaker may
- trip.
-
-
-
-
- --
- Jim Roche
- roche@cs.rochester.edu
- University of Rochester Computer Science Department Rochester, NY 14627
-