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From: [email protected] (James Roche)
Subject: rec.woodworking Electric Motors Frequently asked Questions
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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
[email protected]
University of Rochester Computer Science Department Rochester, NY 14627