Yes this was my intention.I imagine OP is thinking about shipping product to various places and having mains input wiring done by others - thus to guarantee motor direction right from the get go - phase direction must be established and set.
Hmm. All I am thinking as "protection" is just to use varistor across all 3 hot wires and ground.(One has to consider how often (many times per minute?) it is switched ON/OFF and how long (24/7?) the device is ON. Also mind the voltage peak when switching OFF an inductive motor ... that all energy goes to the power supply / optocouplers... if no additional effort and cost is taken for overvoltage protection.
It's all a benefit for a (dumb) customer while all the risk and cost is on the manufacturer.
I never used interlock before. I googled and understood how it works. So if I have to use interlock then, I guess I need 2 units of 4pole (one pole for holding contact) contactor?Two points about contactor usage. It's not safe to use a single 2xNO/2xNC contactor to switch phases, it likely causes a phase short due to delayed extinction of contact arc.
Sounds simple.Hmm. All I am thinking as "protection" is just to use varistor across all 3 hot wires and ground.
Take any phase, call it "A"
When "A" goes through its zero crossing in one particular direction, it can clock a D type flip flop.
At that instant, phases "B" and "C" one will always be positive and the other always negative.
That relationship reveres if the two phases are reversed.
You only need monitor for example phase "B" to see if its on its positive or negative half cycle to know if phase rotation is correct or reversed.
If two phases follow on in correct sequence, the third must be correct.
Sorry, I donot undertsand how flipping ACR1 and ACR2 can work but the other way won't. My thought process was that I ensure ACR1 must be switched before closing ACR2, how position of ACR1 and ACR2 matter?Your ACR1 circuits runs also into the problems mentioned in post #9, it's not safe to use a single contactor for phase reversal. The circuit can work if the positions of ACR1 and ACR2 are flipped.
As @FvM mentioned, when one of the phase is cut-off during motor run, I see it's LinetoNeutral voltage drops significantly. In my test, It dropped from 230Vrms to 150Vrms. I rigged following voltage divider and sensed it on my low-cost microcontroller. (I used 47uF capacitor to get pure DC).Where there is no neutral, as is usual with motors, how about feeding all thee motor phases combined through a single fairly sensitive current transformer ?
Hi, thank a lot for the schematic, this works. But design that I posted works with only 2 switches (that too only NO/NC). Costwise I would still go for my design, don't you think? And safety-wise I wasnot sure. I thought it is safe as long as I use High voltage switches like this one. CA2KN22M7 Relay - Datasheet. However @FvM disagreed to this.What about this one
It works flawlessly.
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