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It doesn't say its a 220-240v on the plate so you may have to get a 220-240v inverter to 380v three phase
mfletch, Try to do the best you can and that's good enough
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Thanks for the replies gentlemen. I have sent an email to Brooks & Crompton requesting some additional information. I will check tonight and see if it's bridged or not. I haven't been able to find any documentation that shows a Brooks and Crompton 3 phase motor that isn't dual voltage rated so I'm keeping my fingers crossed.
Shawn
Shawn, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun Forum since Nov 2013.
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02-18-2015, 12:47 AM
(This post was last modified: 02-18-2015, 12:53 AM by Shawn.)
Im not sure if these photos help but the three wires coming into the motor are each on the same poles as three of the wires coming out of the motor W1 U1 and V1. There are a total of six wires coming out of the motor, the other three are all on a single pole together, those are W2 U2 and V2
Shawn, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun Forum since Nov 2013.
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its wire as Star or Y in other places
so its connected for the higher voltage on the name plate
but someone has been messing with that block it not wired as it should be
W1 V2
U1 W2
V1 U2
for star you link vertical v2 w2 u2 with the mains on w1 u1 v1
for delta you remove the links and place the ink horizontaly w1 v2 u1 w2 v1 u2 with the main still on w1 u1 and v1
the offset on the numbers allow simple linking because each winding is w1 start and w2 end and so on
that motor will not be able to be wire for 220vac so a VFD is out without transformers
a phase converter with transformer would work
also the age of that motor make running on a VFD dodgy they were not designed for variable frequecy use its down to the insulation and iron to copper ratio
IMHO if you want to go VFD then get a package deal, motor and VFD from the same supplier ( often they will program the unit for you )
Stuart
Lordedmond, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun Forum since Jul 2013.
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Thanks Stuart not what I was hoping for but good to know all the same. I'm not sure I understand how the motor is supposed to be wired though? It was running when I picked it up and I do have a step up teansformer that was used on the lathe to go from 220v 3 phase to 400v 3 phase. Does the transformer care how many phases it's converting? Could I use the same teansformer to step up 220v single phase to 400v single phase and then run the motor with a Vfd set to 50 hertz? The lathe has a built in variable speed capability so I could leave the vfd set to one speed.
Thanks again guys for the help.
Shawn, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun Forum since Nov 2013.
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Would it be possible and reasonable to consider getting the motor rewound for 240v 3 ph? Then I could use a Vfd and keep things simple?
Shawn, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun Forum since Nov 2013.