MS Exercise 1and2

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Motor Starting Exercises 1 and 2

1. Exercise 1: Static Motor Starting


Purpose and Description
Purpose of this exercise is to perform static motor starting analysis using different motor starting
settings. This exercise helps to illustrate use of different parameters specified in motor editor for motor
starting analysis.

Setup
Open the project file named MSExample1and2.OTI

Procedure
1.1. Motor Data input for Static Motor Starting
 Go to the Imp page of induction motor editor or LR Model page of synchronous motor editor
and enter the LRC for following motors.

Table 1.1: Motor Locked Rotor Current


Motor ID LRC %
Mtr1 650
Mtr2 600
Mtr4 600
Mtr5 650
Syn1 615

 Go to the Start Cat page for the motors listed below and enter the data.

Table 1.2: Starting Category, % Loading and Time of motor load change
Select Starting % Loading Time of Load
Category Change
Motor ID Cat ID Check? Start Final Begin End
Mtr1 Normal Yes 0 100 2 4
Mtr2 Backup No 0 100 1 2
Mtr4 Normal Yes 80 100 1 2
Mtr5 Normal No 60 100 1 4
Syn1 Normal Yes 25 90 2 4

 Go to the Load page for the motors listed below and enter the Acceleration Time data

Table 1.3: Acceleration Time (Static Starting)


Motor ID No Load (sec) Full Load (sec)
Mtr1 1 2
Mtr2 0.5 1
Mtr4 1 2
Mtr5 2 4
Syn1 1 2

ETAP Workshop Notes ©1996-2015 ETAP Page 1 of 5


Motor Starting Exercises 1 and 2

1.2. Set up Study Case:– Use MSCase-1


 Info Page:
 Info Page: Select “Design” for both Prestart Loading Category and Prestart Generation
Category
 Set Load Diversity Factor to “None”

 Event Page:
 Run simulation for 15 seconds.
 Events (described in table 1.4)

Table 1.4: Study Case Event Description


Event Time
Action Type Parameter Setting
ID (sec)
By Element Start Mtr5 using normal starting category
Event 1 0.2
By Element Switch on static load 2, Loading Category: Design
By Starting Start all motors in the system belonging to Normal
Event 2 3
Category Category (Mtr1, Mtr4 and Syn1)

 Model Page:
 Include XFMR LTC in Pre-starting Load Flow, not during simulation
 Starting Load of Accelerating Motors – Based on Motor Mechanical Load

 Adjustments & Alert Pages:


 Use default settings (do not modify)

1.3. Static Motor Starting


 Run static motor starting and check Alert View and observe motor under voltage alerts
 Are the under voltage issues due to the motors themselves or are they related to starting
sequence events created in the study case?

 Make a copy of study case MSCase-1 (call it MSCase-2) and inside of the event page of the
study case, do the following:
 Deactivate “Event 2” by selecting it, clicking on Edit button, and uncheck the Active
checkbox.
 Add an event labeled “Mtr1” and start Mtr1 at t=4 sec
 Add an event labeled “Syn1” and start Syn1 at t=8 sec
 Add an event labeled “Mtr4” and start Mtr4 at t=12 sec
 Increase Total simulation time to 20 Sec.

 Rerun Static motor starting with MSCase-2. Do you see any critical alert? Why/Why not?

ETAP Workshop Notes ©1996-2015 ETAP Page 2 of 5


Motor Starting Exercises 1 and 2

2. Exercise 2: Dynamic Motor Starting


Purpose and Description
Purpose of this exercise is to perform dynamic motor starting analysis using different motor models
and load models. This exercise helps to illustrate the difference between static and dynamic motor
starting analysis. The dynamic acceleration requires a dynamic circuit model representation of the
electrical behavior of the motor. The mechanical parameters and the inertia of the rotor, shaft,
coupling and load are also needed.

The nameplate rating values of the motor (i.e. rated %PF, efficiency, slip, rated kVA, etc) used for
load flow and short-circuit studies may be different than those used for motor acceleration studies.

The nameplate ratings can also be determined from the dynamic or characteristic circuit model. Only
use the new circuit model for motor acceleration purposes by unchecking the options to update the
“Nameplate Data”, “Loading Data”, and “Short-circuit Data”. Only update the characteristic data.

Setup:
Continue using the same exercise project “MSExample1and2.oti”

Procedure
2.1. Motor Data input for Dynamic Motor Starting

 Enter the data in Table 2.1 in the Model (LR Model for sync motors), Load, and Inertia pages
for the motors listed under Motor ID.

 For motors with CKT model selections uncheck all update boxes (see Figure 2.1). For motors
with characteristic curves accept to update all characteristic data (see Figure 2.2).

Table 2.1: dynamic circuit model selection and mechanical information


Motor
Circuit Model Mechanical Load
Motor ID Inertia
Type Library Type Library H
CKT HV-HS-LT,
Mtr1 Polynomial FAN 0.4
Single 2 MV500HP2P
LV-HS-HT,
Mtr2 Charac. Polynomial a k***3 0.2
LV200HP2P
CKT HV-HS-HT, Recip.
Syn1 Polynomial 0.5
Single 2 MV1000HP2P Comp

ETAP Workshop Notes ©1996-2015 ETAP Page 3 of 5


Motor Starting Exercises 1 and 2

Figure 2.1: Uncheck the update for all sections to keep nameplate data intact (CKT model)

Figure 2.2: Select to update characteristic data (motors with Characteristic curve model)

ETAP Workshop Notes ©1996-2015 ETAP Page 4 of 5


Motor Starting Exercises 1 and 2

2.2. Set up Study Case:– Use MSCase-1

2.3. Run Dynamic Motor Starting

 Can all the motors be started? (Check Mtr4)


 Solution to solve problem with motor failing to start. The key is to increase acceleration
torque. Which methods listed below can solve the problem and which might not?
o Change starting sequence (Will MSCase-2 work in this case?)
o Use XFMR LTC – (How much effect can it have?)
o Use starting device – (A very large Capacitor?)
o Use larger motor (Is it possible in an actual system?)
o Change the load (Is it possible in an actual system?)
o Try to change Mtr4 Starting Load from 80% to 60% or 40% -- Can Mtr4 be started
now?
 Check for low voltage problem – Are there any voltage problem? (check Bus4 and Bus7)
 Use study case MSCase-2. Do you see any critical alerts now?

ETAP Workshop Notes ©1996-2015 ETAP Page 5 of 5

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