Rotary phase converter

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26 Aug 2010 19:42 #394101 by jjdwoodman
Rotary phase converter was created by jjdwoodman
So I've been looking into building a phase converter and I'm thinking about doing just a quick and dirty setup with just a motor, trip switch and a rip cord to spin it up. Some of my research says this is a great setup, while others say I need to set it up with start and balance capacitors to balance the load. Any help or advice?

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26 Aug 2010 20:05 #394108 by PLUMMEN
Replied by PLUMMEN on topic Rotary phase converter
what are you trying to power with it?

Still recovering,some days are better than others.

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26 Aug 2010 21:13 #394117 by jjdwoodman
Replied by jjdwoodman on topic Rotary phase converter
For now I have a power feeder with a 2hp motor on it, but I'm looking to add a wide belt sander 10 hp, not to be run at the same time. No electronics this is all older stuff. Otherwise I'd fork over the cash to bring it in 1/4 mile from the highway.

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27 Aug 2010 07:18 #394179 by 531blackbanshee
Replied by 531blackbanshee on topic Rotary phase converter
i have seen them done that way.i have also seen them use a little 110 motor with a rubber wheel that you could lever into the big motor to spin it up then throw the switch and pull the 110 motor away.ran a lathe and mill at the same time that way.

leon

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27 Aug 2010 16:33 - 27 Aug 2010 16:39 #394357 by steell
Replied by steell on topic Rotary phase converter
Rotary phase converters are simple to build, and cheap if you use used parts.

If you are going to rope start a 10 hp 3 phase motor very often, then be sure to set aside some money for new shirts. Your biceps are going to grow :laugh:

I started off with a bare 5hp 3 phase motor, spin it up and flip the breaker on, if it wasn't spinning fat enough when I flipped the breaker on it would growl at me.

Used some stuff I had gotten in a box for $5 at an auction to build a self starting phase converter out of that same 5 hp motor. Works a treat, just flip on the breaker and away she goes. Got bored one day and built another one with big old meters to monitor voltage on each leg, never used it though.

The phase converter powers my mill and surface grinder, the lathe is powered by a VFD

I never bothered to balance the converter, it's a 5hp powering two 1 hp machines.

Oh yeah, a 10hp three phase motor is going to pull an awful lot of amps as inrush current when you start it, so you might think about using a 1/2 hp or so single phase motor with a belt and pulleys to spin it up. Leave the single phase motor hooked to the 3 phase motor permanently. Just shut the power off after the 3 phase is running. Won't hurt and it will actually help if you're starting a big load.

Practical Machinist has a whole forum on phase conversion.

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Last edit: 27 Aug 2010 16:39 by steell.

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27 Aug 2010 20:01 #394431 by jjdwoodman
Replied by jjdwoodman on topic Rotary phase converter
One thing I haven't been able to figure out... Is the motor just rotating power from the other two legs out of phase, or does it actually generate the third leg power?

I do have several small pony motors around so I may just do that. If you're really loading the rpc would you need to turn it back on to act as a sort of run capacitor?

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28 Aug 2010 09:01 #394518 by steell
Replied by steell on topic Rotary phase converter
The way I understand it is the motor is generating the third phase using residual magnetism from the other two phases.

My self starting phase converter uses a potential relay hooked up to the third leg and controlling the start capacitor(s).
If the voltage on the 3rd leg drops below a certain point (I think 200V in my case), the potential relay connects the starting capacitors into the circuit. No volts at start up, so capacitors kick in, if I were to slow the motor to the point the voltage on the third leg dropped below 200, capacitors would kick in again to boost it back up. When I turn it off and the motor slows down, all at once the motor will "kick" as the capacitors kick in.

The more mass you have rotating, the more load it's going to take to slow the motor down. That's why I suggest leaving the pony motor connected via V belt full time. Max load normally happens at start up, and only lasts for a second or two.

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28 Aug 2010 09:24 #394523 by jjdwoodman
Replied by jjdwoodman on topic Rotary phase converter
Sounds like the relay and capacitors is easy enough to build, I already have an empty box to put it in I just don't know where to go to get them cheap. Locke is high, but I've been watching cl with no luck

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28 Aug 2010 18:34 #394623 by baldtires

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28 Aug 2010 18:42 #394625 by steell
Replied by steell on topic Rotary phase converter
baldtires wrote:

just a thought

www.surpluscenter.com/sort.asp?catname=electric&keyword=EPPC


Yep, that's where a lot of guys are getting parts.

Potential relay is $9 - $13 or so at Grainger, and single purpose three phase relays are pretty cheap there also. Just be sure to get one with a 110V or 220V coil or you'll need a transformer to provide 12V or 24V .

Tell me what parts you need and I'll look around here.

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28 Aug 2010 20:10 #394640 by jjdwoodman
Replied by jjdwoodman on topic Rotary phase converter
Thanks for the help. The first thing I have to do is find an extra motor around here. My fater in-law works at a quarry, so I'm hoping he can scavange something for me. I was going to build something real simple at first with what I have around while I look for the extras. I guess what I will need for capacitors and will depend on what I can find for an idler motor. I'm hoping I can find a 10 to 15 hp, but for now I may have a trade worked out for a sander that has a 3 on it and I can rob that for the idler and convert it to single phase.

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28 Aug 2010 20:45 #394645 by steell
Replied by steell on topic Rotary phase converter
When you talk 10-15 hp you're also talking minimum 100 amp service to the garage/shop, not including what the house uses.

I'm not sure a 15 hp motor wouldn't trip a 100 amp breaker at start up :woohoo:

Your garage/shop have separate electrical service from house?

My understand is that idle motors can be ganged for greater hp. So you could use 3 5 hp motors in order to get your 15 hp.
Build a self starting 5 hp then start the other two one at a time off the 3 phase from the first one.

Lots of ways to skin a cat :D

KD9JUR

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