Jim Timber
Veteran Member
Just did a quick search and you're looking at about $1100.00 for a 20 hp VFD.
I got my 75HP (that's not a typo!) VFD for $750 shipped. The smaller ones cost more than the bigger ones. You can set load limits in the controls on the higher end drives.
As most of the guys have said, you want to de-rate the drive by half, but going bigger is perfectly acceptable.
I did the motor swap to single phase on my T30 IR compressor before I realized the VFD's soft starting would actually pay for the conversion in energy not used, and then later yet I've discovered that the reactive current from the VFD's (I run 3 motors on them now) actually confuses my digital electric utility meter into thinking we're putting back more than I'm using. It runs our bill backwards when I'm in the shop a lot; which just means we don't pay as much to keep the wife at 72F in the summer time.
Some VFD's will have a leg-loss fault that you'll need to program to ignore. Every VFD on the market made for 3Ph will run on single off two legs. You can't get a VFD made for higher voltage to run off 220-240 though, they'll error out on low input voltage and it's not user fixable (I've tried). So as long as it's the correct input voltage and 2x the power of your load, you're set. You can get universal transformers to bump 240v up to 480 etc - and then run machines that are wired with controls that would be too much trouble to convert. A VFD will run on the input side of a big transformer.