I will rephrase my question to be more straight forward:
If I limit the output current of the VFD from 20A to 13A , does this "convert" the 2.2kW VFD/spindle combo to 1.5kW?
Hi everyone,
I am currently building my first CNC machine (PrintNC) and am a total newbie, so please excuse if this question is obvious for you the experts.
Being in the US on 110V 20A circuits, I ordered a Huang Yang 1.5kW VFD/spindle combo online, but "unfortunately" the vendor sent me a 2.2kW combo.
https://prom-electric.ru/media/hy01d523b.pdf
Being borderline for my circuits, I am hoping I can limit the current using the PD142 function to "fake" the rated current of the spindle and reduce to it 13A to get close to 1.5kW, assuming this is what the 1.5kW/110V VFD model should be set at. Is that the correct approach? Any risk the breakers on which the VFD and spindle are individually connected to would trip?
Thanks in advance for your help.
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I will rephrase my question to be more straight forward:
If I limit the output current of the VFD from 20A to 13A , does this "convert" the 2.2kW VFD/spindle combo to 1.5kW?
Hello.
In a sense you do. By limiting the current you ensure that overloads do not lead to motor overheating and getting burned, in particular when the driven motor is of lower specs than the drive.
It would also help to use the external braking resistor. Check with your supplier.
I hope this clears things a little.
Regards.
I don't really have enough info to give an opinion on what you should do.
Is the 2.2 kW spindle supposed to be run on 220V? Have you got a manual for the actual spindle?
Also, on good quality spindles, the power rating is the power output of the spindle, not the power input. Your spindle motor is not 100% efficient in converting electricity to rotational power at the spindle output. On Chinese spindles, they do whatever they feel like when making up the numbers. Is this a Russian spindle?
The link you posted if you scroll down a few pages to "Standards and Specifications", there is no Single Phase 110V option listed as an input for the VFD.
No it won't.
If the V/f curve (Voltage / frequency) for your spindle is a straight line, which it might be, then running it at 110V (assuming that it is a 220V spindle) and setting the max current to the max current for the spindle as per the spindle manual (assuming that this is less than 20 amps), should get you identical performance up to 1/2 of the maximum RPM of that spindle, if you were driving it at 220V, but will not give you the same performance you would get from the 1.5 kW spindle. My guess is that you'd have more torque at low RPM with the 220V, and after you get to the point on the V/f curve where Voltage surpasses 110V (guessing this happens at about half of full RPM for your spindle) then the performance would go down from expected values, I don't know how much.
You will never "convert" it to give the same performance as the 1.5 kW, IMO.
And it is better, IMO, to run at the correct current at a lower voltage, than the other way around.
Your big problem is that your VFD does not appear to have single phase 110V input from the brief look I had at the manual.
Based on what you're saying, it sounds like you have a 110V 2.2kw spindle and VFD, with the spindle rated at 20 amps? If so, then yes, limiting the current effectively makes it a 1.5Kw spindle. There's nothing wrong with using a VFD with a higher KW rating then the spindle.
Gerry
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Thank you all for the replies. Let me had some details.
I confirm that the VFD and spindle are both 110V, not 220V. The link to the manual was just to reference to current limit function (P142). I include pictures of the spindle and VFD below with electrical specs. Surprisingly, the current rating on the spindle is 8.5A, so not sure where the 2.2kW comes from...Is that current per conductor?
I have read also that the current input for the VFD is nearly double that of the output. If that is correct, I would need 40A in to get the 20A output stated on the plate.
To be clear, I got this 2.2kW/110V combo from a CNC stater kit on Aliexpress. I am not sure if I can return it free of charge and the only thing I could get as replacement is a 1.5kW/110V combo. There are 220V options, but I have only three 20A/110V breakers in my little shop, so running 220V lines migth be hard.
Knowing these specs and the fact that I paid a 2.2kW combo for the price of a 1.5kW, do you see any benefit in swapping the 2.2kw for the 1.5kw? Would not running the 2.2kw at 60% (1.5kw/2.2kw) give me about the same performance compared to the 1.5kw at 100%?
More importantly, will the 110V/20A breaker on which the VDF is solely connected being able to handle the load if the output current going to the spindle (connected to a different 110V/20A breaker) is 13A (see above comment about current IN being 2X of current OUT)?
You should be setting the VFD to output 8.5 amps, which is the rating for the spindle you have.
Gerry
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[URL]http://www.thecncwoodworker.com/2010.html[/URL]
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[URL]http://www.g-forcecnc.com/jointcam.html[/URL]
(Note: The opinions expressed in this post are my own and are not necessarily those of CNCzone and its management)
You really should make the seller take it back and give you the 1.5Kw spindle the 2.2Kw spindle will not perform very well being 110v the US and all of NA supply is 120v the 2.2Kw @110v is not 8.5A
The VFD Drive would be fine for the 1.5Kw but not for the 2.2Kw you would need a 30A supply to run that spindle at 2.2Kw on 120v and the VFD Drive has a max of 20A so is not suitable for that spindle
Dumbing down the spindle it will stall even with light cuts as it won't have the torque at it's max operating speed
Correct the current in is roughly twice the output current, so you only have a supply that will run a 1.5Kw not a 2.2Kw
Mactec54
Mac could you elaborate on the 2.2kw 110v vfd? Why would the 20 amps it outputs not be sufficient to drive a 2.2kw 110v spindle. I am having a hard time understanding. Is the 8 amp rating, of the spindle, per conductor?