Variable frequency drive for small single phase motor..

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Dodgy Geezer

Joined Nov 30, 2009
181
@shortbus

Changing any internal structure in a tunnel usually means a lot of time to de-rig, re-rig and re-calibrate.

I'm not sure about one of your earlier comments -
Since wind tunnels usually suck/pull, not blow, the air through them.
Yes - I do expect to have a contraction stage, a test section, a diffuser and a fan, in that order, so the air will be sucked through. I had to imagine how you would position an orifice or baffle in the downstream diffuser, so you may have an approach that I had not thought of. But keeping a predictable airflow through the test section depends a lot on maintaining a fixed flow which adheres reliably to the walls of the diffuser. 'Off-centre' suction would result in a gradient across the test section, and baffles could cause boundary layer separation. This would be likely to result in surges, which would probably propagate upstream, and into the test section...
 
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schmitt trigger

Joined Jul 12, 2010
2,090
There is a problem driving a PSC motor with a VFD: the capacitor’s reactance varies with frequency.
Which in practice means that the split phase winding won’t see the correct electric phase to generate the rotating magnetic field, it would become a pulsating field.....

This is what I would do: since you already have that AC motor, at least give it a try with a Triac based control. Those are inexpensive, and it might just work.
But if it doesn’t, then you’ll have to bite the bullet and obtain the correct motor- drive combo.
Either a 3 phase with a VFD or a DC one with a phase control.
 
60RPM is gearhead and/or DC motor territory. A sufficiently massive DC motor with closed-loop speed control would provide plenty of low speed torque, broad speed range and adequate speed regulation for this sort of job. DC treadmill motors on the order of 1-4HP can be had for cheap and usually come fitted with heavy flywheels to aid in speed regulation. Speeds on the order of 20-5,000 RPM depending on loading and cooling. You would simply need to furnish an encoder/tachometer and a closed-loop DC speed controller. Or if the load is static, adjust the input voltage until a photo tac reads the desired speed.
 
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