For a pure inertia load (no load torque), the heat energy added to the rotor winding during acceleration (starting) is equal to the kinetic energy of the rotating mass at full speed. The total kinetic energy added to the rotating mass during acceleration to full speed is always the same for a particular value of motor and load inertia regardless of load torque.
The effect of load torque is to increase the heat energy added to the stator and rotor windings during acceleration to full speed due to longer accelerating time. The kinetic energy is added to the rotating mass at a rate determined by the accelerating torque (motor developed torque less load torque), and the heat added to the rotor winding is determined by the rotor current and the accelerating time.
The accelerating time (and the time the high starting current exists) is inversely proportional to the accelerating torque. Under low-voltage starting conditions, the ratio of heat added to the rotor compared to the kinetic energy at full speed is even greater because the accelerating torque is reduced (developed torque varies approximately as the square of the voltage), the load torque is unchanged, and the ratio of accelerating torque to load torque is reduced
Token Ring At the start, a free Token is circulating on the ring, this is…
Two or more amplifiers can be connected in a cascaded arrangement with the output of…
A linear amplifier provides amplification of a signal without any distortion so that the output…
What is Rectifier? A rectifier is a device that simply converts alternating current (AC) into…
Types of Diodes: Small signal or Small current diode - These diodes assumes that the…
Ethernet Bus: This is a coax based Ethernet network where all machines are daisy chained…