| PAPER SHREDDER GOES
SOFT ON STARTING
January 2005
A
soft start that is acting like an energy controller has reduced
power consumption on a waste paper shredder being run by Mondi
packaging in March, Cambridgeshire.
Soft starts,
as their name implies, allow electric motors to start up steadily
over a period of a second or two, rather than coming on-line suddenly
which can cause physical damage through mechanical shock and cause
voltage transients and power corruption in the mains supply especially
on larger motors.
The soft start
was recommended and supplied by drives and controls specialists
Silverteam to their distributor Nottingham Electrical Transmissions
(NET), which was helping Mondi re-engineer its waste materials
processing plant. Site Engineer Peter Sweeney explains. “We
manufacturer corrugated paper/card using a continuous web process.
This is trimmed to width and we shred and bale up the trimming
for recycling.
“Originally
we had the shredder running 24 hours a day, but a site wide energy
audit made us realise that it is only in use about 75 percent
of the time. Stopping it rather than having it idling would obviously
save energy, but we were worried that the stopping and starting
would cause problems with the mains supply.”
The basic
design of the shredder includes an in-feed conveyor, a shredding
‘fan’ and a baler. The fan is in fact a solid metal
disc with six cutter blades mounted on its front face. The fan
is mounted in a housing and sucks the trim off the end of the
conveyor and into the blades. As the trim is shredded to the required
size the centrifugal force moves it to the outer edge of the disc
from where the trough draft draws it over the disc and into the
baler.
Experts from Silverteam & NET where called in to assess various
options such as harmonic filters, variable speed drives and soft
starts, who noted that the nominal rating of the fan was 22kW
while the average load factor was 9.3kW, or less than half of
its capacity. This lead to the suggestion of a soft start solution,
with the tantalising promise of significant energy savings as
well as protection of the mains quality.
In
fact Silverteam/NET where so confident that it suggested that
an expert Mr Phil Windsor from Nottingham University school of
Environmental Engineering were called in to assess the results
in detail. They monitored the performance of the fan before and
after installation of the soft start and confirmed in an official
report that the power consumption fell and the soft start was
acting as an energy controller.
Energy controllers
allow motors to run at constant (optimum) speed. When the load
is less than 90 per cent of the motor rating the controller reduces
the current from the power supply, reducing the voltage and hence
saving energy even though the motor remains running at its set
speed.
“The
design of the soft start installation was quite complex,”
says Sweeney, “because we had to allow for intermittent
running, varying load, varying trim size and varying fan speed.
Thanks to Silverteam, the fan drive is saving energy, as are many
other parts of the plant thanks to the re-engineering, and our
mains supply is probably sweeter than previously too.”
|