What he is saying though actually appears to defy ohms law. Surely if a a motor is drawing more current then the power consumption is going to go up which inturn means the motor will heat up more and more energy will be lost as heat. If they are doing this with large motors then ir will not be beneficial to the life of the motor.
I still do not understand what he saying about controlling the speed of the motor if you reduce the voltage the motor will not run slower if it is an induction motor otherwise speed control would be easily done by varying the voltage but this makes no difference, so thyristor soft start units and inverters have been designed to do it. At the power station i work at when the reactor trips the supplies to the gas circulators are lost, the supply is then switched back onto them and the only way that can be used to control their speed is to use inverter drive units to vary the frequency.
these motors are a lot larger than what is found on compressor though!
cheers karl
I still do not understand what he saying about controlling the speed of the motor if you reduce the voltage the motor will not run slower if it is an induction motor otherwise speed control would be easily done by varying the voltage but this makes no difference, so thyristor soft start units and inverters have been designed to do it. At the power station i work at when the reactor trips the supplies to the gas circulators are lost, the supply is then switched back onto them and the only way that can be used to control their speed is to use inverter drive units to vary the frequency.
these motors are a lot larger than what is found on compressor though!
cheers karl