To all thread replies: I truly appreciate your efforts, and I honestly do appreciate people trying to help one another out. However, with that being said, and with utmost respect to our older ones in the community, I feel I must give a reply.
When I said I am a newbie to electronics, I meant a newbie to electronics. I work with million dollar devices (Heat wheels, cooling towers, high and low pressure chillers, MUA's, boilers, generators, etc), operate millions of btu boilers and generators, work on devices that operate with thousands of pounds of refrigerant, diagnose and actively work on 4160 V chillers. I have been flown across Canada for my expertise in controls, and I have aided in the design of large scale commercial control systems. There are less that 20 people across Canada that hold my licenses. I would however, like to learn about electronics. Let us review my initial scope of work. I feel I was quite clear. Specifically, I am asking for help in determining the specifications required for an oscilloscope to work on a 600/3/60 system. KeepItSimpleStupid aided, and I appreciate his help. I have not asked for safety guides (and definitely not 6 layers of them). I am honestly disappointed in those comments specifically. I will not go into detail as I do not think it would be appropriate.
However, I am quite surprised by the responses. We do understand that there are companies that make, test, and repair these VFD's, right? The ones who made the equipment (MGI, Armstrong, Vacon, etc) definitely would. Therefore, they would need equipment to do so. I have asked what type of equipment they would use.
Further to my surprise, not a single person commented on the distortion comment. I am shocked there was not a comment regarding the frequencies of the triplens in the harmonics, and the requirements on the scope in order to do so.
Disregarding the lack of satisfying answers directly related to the thread and the questions directly asked, I feel comfortable to jump to the overwhelming concerns regarding safety. As for ground reference, a true isolation transformer, with a wye secondary and the tie point obviously grounded, we would eliminate the ground concern. Further to this, the thread was asking about testing a VFD, not the motor. A simple replacement of the motor leads at the ouput of the switching circuit, say with any known load that would draw .5 amps on a known voltage, would eliminate high currents and would still allow me to test the VFD, assuming it was the VFD at fault. And, as stated in the very first paragraph of the thread, the goal was clearly stated to test the three main components of the board without removing them from the PCB. A additional goal, as stated if possible, would have been to see and diagnose harmonics.
This is a thread from Yokogawa (A VFD manufacturer)
. In the video, they show an oscilloscope. I will look up the manufacturers datasheet regarding the specs of the device, and read a book regarding what those specs mean, and then determine what I need.
Besides KeepItSimple's comments, I have found this forum quite frustrating, and I'm truly disappointed in these responses considering how much I've enjoyed this website's tutorials. It will be my aim to remove myself as a member.
When I said I am a newbie to electronics, I meant a newbie to electronics. I work with million dollar devices (Heat wheels, cooling towers, high and low pressure chillers, MUA's, boilers, generators, etc), operate millions of btu boilers and generators, work on devices that operate with thousands of pounds of refrigerant, diagnose and actively work on 4160 V chillers. I have been flown across Canada for my expertise in controls, and I have aided in the design of large scale commercial control systems. There are less that 20 people across Canada that hold my licenses. I would however, like to learn about electronics. Let us review my initial scope of work. I feel I was quite clear. Specifically, I am asking for help in determining the specifications required for an oscilloscope to work on a 600/3/60 system. KeepItSimpleStupid aided, and I appreciate his help. I have not asked for safety guides (and definitely not 6 layers of them). I am honestly disappointed in those comments specifically. I will not go into detail as I do not think it would be appropriate.
However, I am quite surprised by the responses. We do understand that there are companies that make, test, and repair these VFD's, right? The ones who made the equipment (MGI, Armstrong, Vacon, etc) definitely would. Therefore, they would need equipment to do so. I have asked what type of equipment they would use.
Further to my surprise, not a single person commented on the distortion comment. I am shocked there was not a comment regarding the frequencies of the triplens in the harmonics, and the requirements on the scope in order to do so.
Disregarding the lack of satisfying answers directly related to the thread and the questions directly asked, I feel comfortable to jump to the overwhelming concerns regarding safety. As for ground reference, a true isolation transformer, with a wye secondary and the tie point obviously grounded, we would eliminate the ground concern. Further to this, the thread was asking about testing a VFD, not the motor. A simple replacement of the motor leads at the ouput of the switching circuit, say with any known load that would draw .5 amps on a known voltage, would eliminate high currents and would still allow me to test the VFD, assuming it was the VFD at fault. And, as stated in the very first paragraph of the thread, the goal was clearly stated to test the three main components of the board without removing them from the PCB. A additional goal, as stated if possible, would have been to see and diagnose harmonics.
This is a thread from Yokogawa (A VFD manufacturer)
Besides KeepItSimple's comments, I have found this forum quite frustrating, and I'm truly disappointed in these responses considering how much I've enjoyed this website's tutorials. It will be my aim to remove myself as a member.