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phase rotation testers

Discuss phase rotation testers in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

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anybody use them.

my jtl training advisor wants me to check phase rotation of motors for portfolio.

i don't see the point. the only motors we use are for fans and vsd driven so you can see what way they spin.

i thought fair enough if there not expensive ill have a look but at £100 ill pass
 
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Same here....more money making unnecessaries, IMO.
yeah jtl have a long list they want you to do.

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if i miss anything ive got to do it in the training centre as a last resorts
 
Due to a hangover from the days of us having our own power station all the 11KV boards were BYR. We used 550V on the plants with the same rotation.

Then two new plants were build which were using this weird 433V. Some genius decided the rotation should be RYB. They were separate from the older plants so it didn’t matter.

Then it came to major alterations to one of the old plants. It was to retain 550V for some parts, 433 for the new stuff. Me being the resident idiot got lumbered with the job. First question, which rotation? Because it was overlapping with old stuff we went for BYR.

Again not really a problem as they were separate entities or so we thought. The plants spread out as they tend to and started to overlap. I got saddled with rebuilding a switchroom with 550V BYR, 433V RYB and 433V BYR. I was going dizzy! To add to the confusion the two 433V feeds could be interconnected.
 
Don't envy you mate, borrow a fluke T100 off someone and get the unit/task signed off no point spending coin on something that sounds like will never be used again by yourself

oh and take a little time to brush up on your motor theory too
 
Due to a hangover from the days of us having our own power station all the 11KV boards were BYR. We used 550V on the plants with the same rotation.

Then two new plants were build which were using this weird 433V. Some genius decided the rotation should be RYB. They were separate from the older plants so it didn’t matter.

Then it came to major alterations to one of the old plants. It was to retain 550V for some parts, 433 for the new stuff. Me being the resident idiot got lumbered with the job. First question, which rotation? Because it was overlapping with old stuff we went for BYR.

Again not really a problem as they were separate entities or so we thought. The plants spread out as they tend to and started to overlap. I got saddled with rebuilding a switchroom with 550V BYR, 433V RYB and 433V BYR. I was going dizzy! To add to the confusion the two 433V feeds could be interconnected.

Sounds like fun Tony, any oh **** moments or did it all turn on ok?
 
Sounds like fun Tony, any oh **** moments or did it all turn on ok?

There's been a few "Why did I do that?" moments.

The best bit was being accused of being drunk. The above switchroom and the great white chief showed up. He noticed incomer 1 was BYR, incomer 2 RYB. Off he goes to the engineering manager saying I must have been drunk to make such a stupid mistake.

At least he had the decency to come back and apologise.




The bottom line, even if the LV intake is reversed so long as the system follows the same rotation throughout you won’t get a problem.

Note, I did say LV, once transformers get involved then there’s phase shift to take in to account. I’ve seen some glorious balls up due to that!
 

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