- Jun 18, 2014
- 660
- Pool Size
- 32000
- Surface
- Vinyl
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- CircuPool RJ-60 Plus
I am installing the Jacuzzi and was looking at the data plate on the motor for voltage and FLA. At 230V the FLA is 10.2 and at 115V the FLA is 12.2. Normally the difference is close to 1 to 2 (at 230V the current is half of what it would be if the voltage is 115V). For anyone that has one of these, have you measure the amperage at the max load? If so what is it and what voltage are you running it at?
Is is possible that the VFD is limiting the power differently depending on the input voltage? For instance, at 230V the current draw is being limited to around 6.1A even thou the motor is capable of 10.2A? Maybe because the pump housing and impeller are not sized well for power the motor could supply. Or is the pump limited when it's powered by 115V? Hayward doesn't publish different flow curves based on input voltage.
My experience with VFD driven pumps is liquid ring and centrifugal vacuum pumps and single speed pumps. Unless the motor design and/or the VFD design is complete Crud the FLA's should not be so close. At 90% efficiency the watts at 230V is 2111 and at 115V it's 1263.
What am I missing?
Is is possible that the VFD is limiting the power differently depending on the input voltage? For instance, at 230V the current draw is being limited to around 6.1A even thou the motor is capable of 10.2A? Maybe because the pump housing and impeller are not sized well for power the motor could supply. Or is the pump limited when it's powered by 115V? Hayward doesn't publish different flow curves based on input voltage.
My experience with VFD driven pumps is liquid ring and centrifugal vacuum pumps and single speed pumps. Unless the motor design and/or the VFD design is complete Crud the FLA's should not be so close. At 90% efficiency the watts at 230V is 2111 and at 115V it's 1263.
What am I missing?