- Settore: Electrical equipment
- Number of terms: 4774
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The burden imposed on a motor by the driven machine. It is often stated as the torque required to overcome the resistance of the machine it drives. Sometimes "load" is synonymous with "required power."
Industry:Electrical equipment
Steady state current taken from the line with the rotor at standstill (at rated voltage and frequency). This is the current seen when starting the motor and load.
Industry:Electrical equipment
The minimum torque that a motor will develop at rest for all angular positions of the rotor (with rated voltage applied at rated frequency).
Industry:Electrical equipment
A motor converts electrical energy into a mechanical energy and in so doing, encounters losses. These losses are all the energy that is put into a motor and not transformed to usable power but are converted into heat causing the temperature of the windings and other motor parts to rise.
Industry:Electrical equipment
In order to reduce wear and avoid overheating certain motor components require lubricating (application of an oil or grease). The bearings are the major motor component requiring lubrication (as per manufacturer's instructions). Excess greasing can however damage the windings and internal switches, etc. (See PLS)
Industry:Electrical equipment
It is a fundamental principle of a winding that adjacent poles must be wound to give opposite magnetic polarity. This does not mean that the coils actually have to be wound in this direction before being placed into the stator. It does mean that the winding must be connected so that, if the current proceeds through one pole in a clockwise direction, it must proceed through the next pole in a counterclockwise direction. This principle is used to determine the correctness of connection diagrams.
Industry:Electrical equipment
A measure of an insulation system's resistance. This is usually measured in megohms and tested by passing a high voltage at low current through the motor windings and measuring the resistance of the various insulation systems.
Industry:Electrical equipment
A device that takes electrical energy and converts it into mechanical energy to turn a shaft.
Industry:Electrical equipment
A motor wound in such a way that varying connections at the starter can change the speed to a predetermined speed. The most common multi-speed motor is a two speed although three- and four-speeds are sometimes available. Multi-speed motors can be wound with two sets of windings or one winding. They are also available either constant torque, variable torque or constant horsepower.
Industry:Electrical equipment