I am finishing up a CNC router build and have opted to use a "stock" 3-phase spindle rather than a DIY spindle. I have received the spindle and the VFD and am wading through the instruction manual and various forum posts about set-up, problems, etc, etc. This is the VFD: http://www.ebay.com/itm/251681093909?_trksid=p2059210.m2749.l2649&ssPageName=STRK:MEBIDX:IT
The manual states (in Chin-English) that for single phase operation two leads from a 240V breaker can be connected to any two of the R/S/T 3 phase inputs....and that neutral/ground should be connected to some hieroglyph that I assume to be "neutral" or "Supply Ground". Visual inspection inside the VFD reveals what appears to be a standard 3-Phase rectifier, and while I have NOT verified the traces, I ASS-U-ME the hieroglyph/neutral/ground is tied to the negative side of the rectifier (I do NOT have this represented in the schematic because I have NOT verified the connection) ....at the risk of over-complicating things, I thought it might meliorate the ripple on the VFD's filter capacitors to "pre-rectify" the two 120V legs of the 240V supply and add some filtering capacitors as demonstrated in the following schematic:
Everything to the right of the R/S/T labels is located inside the VFD, there are also filter capacitors inside the VFD, but I have not disassembled the VFD enough to read the values....Everything to the left of the R/S/T labels is the "proposed supply circuit" to help provide a more stable source for the VFD.
I would love some thoughts on the addition of the proposed circuit....ESPECIALLY any reasons for NOT employing it.
The Drive/VFD are rated @ 2.2kW which implies a current of slightly less than 10A under full load....I am concerned that the capacitors in the VFD simply are not large enough to "fill the valley" during the "low voltage" portion of the 60hz supply....I don't know that 6 * 330uF capacitors in series/parallel (Total effective capacitance ~495uF) are up to the job either, but I figured that was a good starting place....assuming an actual peak voltage of 339V (240V * 2^0.5) to keep the supply voltage above the 220V output voltage for 8mS @ a constant 10A drain would require a capacitor bank of at least 2000uF....and I KNOW the VFD rectifier capacitors are not that large, heck, the entire VFD isn't that large, lol.
I know for a fact that there are thousands of these VFDs working from single phase supplies with these exact spindles and NO pre-rectifier or filter Capacitors....but it seems like "an ounce of prevention" might ease some of the stresses on the VFD and the spindle....but I am more than a little out of my comfort zone here and I would love some thoughts//suggestions.
Fish
The manual states (in Chin-English) that for single phase operation two leads from a 240V breaker can be connected to any two of the R/S/T 3 phase inputs....and that neutral/ground should be connected to some hieroglyph that I assume to be "neutral" or "Supply Ground". Visual inspection inside the VFD reveals what appears to be a standard 3-Phase rectifier, and while I have NOT verified the traces, I ASS-U-ME the hieroglyph/neutral/ground is tied to the negative side of the rectifier (I do NOT have this represented in the schematic because I have NOT verified the connection) ....at the risk of over-complicating things, I thought it might meliorate the ripple on the VFD's filter capacitors to "pre-rectify" the two 120V legs of the 240V supply and add some filtering capacitors as demonstrated in the following schematic:
Everything to the right of the R/S/T labels is located inside the VFD, there are also filter capacitors inside the VFD, but I have not disassembled the VFD enough to read the values....Everything to the left of the R/S/T labels is the "proposed supply circuit" to help provide a more stable source for the VFD.
I would love some thoughts on the addition of the proposed circuit....ESPECIALLY any reasons for NOT employing it.
The Drive/VFD are rated @ 2.2kW which implies a current of slightly less than 10A under full load....I am concerned that the capacitors in the VFD simply are not large enough to "fill the valley" during the "low voltage" portion of the 60hz supply....I don't know that 6 * 330uF capacitors in series/parallel (Total effective capacitance ~495uF) are up to the job either, but I figured that was a good starting place....assuming an actual peak voltage of 339V (240V * 2^0.5) to keep the supply voltage above the 220V output voltage for 8mS @ a constant 10A drain would require a capacitor bank of at least 2000uF....and I KNOW the VFD rectifier capacitors are not that large, heck, the entire VFD isn't that large, lol.
I know for a fact that there are thousands of these VFDs working from single phase supplies with these exact spindles and NO pre-rectifier or filter Capacitors....but it seems like "an ounce of prevention" might ease some of the stresses on the VFD and the spindle....but I am more than a little out of my comfort zone here and I would love some thoughts//suggestions.
Fish