Chilliwack Murray
Gold Member
Most generators with automatic voltage regulators will reduce voltage if the frequency drops below about 59hz which effectively reduces kw load (amps x volts) to allow the engine to catch up however if the load is too much for the engine you end up running with lower voltage. Simpler transformer regulated units also drop voltage with rpm but it’s not by design as much as physics.
A standard motor will draw more current as voltage decreases and cause overheating and is the main reason motors fail. Higher voltage and frequency changes are actually not that harmful to a motor.
An electronic drive like a VFD takes the supply voltage, rectifies if then inverts it back to AC again so the motor never sees the generator frequency or voltage. Most VFDs are designed to run on 50 or 60Hz system last so they are very tolerant of a slow running 60Hz unit.
Not surprising they see a lot of failures of standard motors when people just add load until the gen just won’t take any more.
The frequency based load shed switches are effective in preventing a complete failure but under frequency is a measure of last resort when it comes to load management. A load shed output that is triggered at 90 - 95% is a much better way to control load but you get what you pay for.
A standard motor will draw more current as voltage decreases and cause overheating and is the main reason motors fail. Higher voltage and frequency changes are actually not that harmful to a motor.
An electronic drive like a VFD takes the supply voltage, rectifies if then inverts it back to AC again so the motor never sees the generator frequency or voltage. Most VFDs are designed to run on 50 or 60Hz system last so they are very tolerant of a slow running 60Hz unit.
Not surprising they see a lot of failures of standard motors when people just add load until the gen just won’t take any more.
The frequency based load shed switches are effective in preventing a complete failure but under frequency is a measure of last resort when it comes to load management. A load shed output that is triggered at 90 - 95% is a much better way to control load but you get what you pay for.