Hi Lee,
I've been involved with a few different industrial RFI issues involving
VFDs where we installed a commercial power line filter on the 3 phase input
power feed to the VFD and it resolved the problem both times. One time the
VFD was for an exhaust fan in a kitchen at a senior apartment complex and
they went back and used the filter recommended by the drive manufacturer,
and the other time it was a VFD on an injection molding machine. The
injection molding machine manufacturer recommended a very expensive filter
that cost around $1200 as I recall and the small injection molding machine
shop was not going to spend that kind of money without knowing it would
work so I spec'd out a 3 phase filter made by Delta Electronics that at the
time cost around $76 which they bought and it worked great in eliminating
the RFI at my house (I took no responsibility in their decision to try what
I suggested and I put that in writing in an email). They then went back to
the equipment manufacturer and they reimbursed him, and he also installed
them on 2 more identical molding machines he purchased at a later date.
The filter we used on the injection molding machine was a Delta
Electronics model 30TDVST2 as an example and it now costs $93 so inflation
has made its mark (Corcom makes similar 3 phase filters which I'm sure
would have worked fine too).
I also have experience with a VFD on my wifes Tread Mill and in that case a
commercial power line filter as well as a 31 material toroid choke on the
power cord per the K9YC design was required to totally eliminate the RFI
(neither of them by themself were totally effective). Also had similar
situation on a neighbors refrigerator causing RFI at W9RE and the
refrigerator likely had a VFD and we had to use both a commercial line
filter and 31 toroid core on the power cord to totally eliminate the RFI,
once again neither by itself was totally effective.
Good Luck,
Don (wd8dsb)
On Thu, Nov 17, 2022 at 9:24 PM Lee STRAHAN <k7tjr@msn.com> wrote:
> Hi Guys
> Well, very interesting to me as well. I have been trying to get a VFD
> drive situation "Fixed' for about 5 years now. It took me a year to figure
> out why I could not just hear a buzz on AM for this noise. It just covers
> up everything weak with a white noise sound. It all started after an air
> compressor burned its housing building structure and itself to the ground
> at the wood products company about 1500 feet away from my farm. They
> replaced their compressor unto my knowledge with a 100 Horsepower unit on a
> VFD drive. I suspected that the new building may be the problem when the
> noise started but had no proof.
> My findings after all this time and the involvement of the power company
> which I must say Pacific Power is VERY responsive is that it is definitely
> the VFD on this compressor that leaves me with 20 dB of extra wideband
> noise over background on 100 Hz CW bandwidth on 160 meters. I reached out
> to the ARRL but without a usual recording of humming noise or digital
> occurrences what I had was useless to the ARRL at the time, years ago. I
> moved my RX antennas 1000 feet away from the power lines in three different
> directions and the noise would still cover most any DX signal.
> What I eventually found was that it was not radiated noise that is the
> problem from the plant but it is conducted noise on the power lines that
> serve both my farm and the wood products business next door and continue to
> a substation about 2 miles away. I finally bought a used SDR-IQ and I was
> able to finally see the interference that would ordinarily just sound as
> wide band noise on any receiver. I mounted one of my Hi-Z amps with a 10
> foot whip on my truck and installed the SDR-IQ and laptop for output in the
> truck cab. It was the immediately clear that the power line was definitely
> involved as I was able to drive about 2 miles from my farm toward the
> substation and still detect that line noise pattern on my SDR-IQ. It was
> also immediately apparent that as I drove into the facility that it was
> coming from there.
> The company has been somewhat responsive but it has been a year now since
> their last response. They have unpowered and powered the whole air
> compressor system with VFD device on and off and we have definitely
> verified it as the source. Their electricians tend to believe in their ways
> and not mine even with my license since 1962 and jobs in RF type signals in
> electronics for 50 years. There are companies that make filters for this at
> 480 volts 3 phase and the electricians as near as I can tell tend to not
> believe that these would help and need to try their own fixes. They have
> tried inductors, transformers, and wire dressing with no avail.
> I have a rather lengthy and sort of crude video of that truck trip and
> I will try to trim it, then rescale its size some and post it on one of my
> websites within a few days. I will share a link here when this happens.
> I have a promise from the guy in charge of the facility that he will get
> back to me after his vacation within a few days. I guess we will see about
> that.
> Bottom line here is that it sometimes takes all the toys to find
> power line problems. I have low frequency receivers, HF receivers with a
> small DF loop, VHF , UHF and ultrasonic frequency receivers for AM. None
> could track this noise except the SDR as it comes from everywhere off the
> lengthy power line. Even when the power company opened the 15 KV to 480 V
> at the plants metal security box transformer for me there was no indication
> of any arcing. The noise starts about 1.5 MHz in the BC band and continues
> up just outside the 80 meter band.
> I will be back no doubt.
> Lee K7TJR OR
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: RFI <rfi-bounces+k7tjr=msn.com@contesting.com> On Behalf Of Jim
> Brown
> Sent: Thursday, November 17, 2022 11:27 AM
> To: rfi@contesting.com
> Subject: Re: [RFI] RFI from variable speed drive 1.1 miles away (very
> interesting case).
>
> On 11/17/2022 7:52 AM, Wes Stewart via RFI wrote:
> > This is very interesting to me as I've posed an earlier, as yet
> unanswered, question about potential RFI in a Bosch inverter-driven
> compressor heat pump,. I am considering this as an alternative to a
> two-speed conventional compressor unit. The Bosch is addition to the
> government mandated ECM blower also uses variable speed condenser fan. The
> schematic shows a couple of toroid chokes on the line input, so they've
> made some attempt at suppression but how effective, who knows.
>
> The analysis I've heard from two very competent engineers (the late Neil
> Muncy, and an industrial consultant who had encountered VFDs in the
> wild) is that a major mechanism is the magnetic field produced by current
> loops in the path between the controller and the motor. Both Neil and that
> EE noted that it is common for motor and controller in industrial
> installations to be widely separated. If there IS a twisted pair, the
> resulting transmission line will confine HF currents to it, but if it's
> NOT, a strong magnetic field will be produced in the random return path
> depending on "ground" between motor and controller, in addition to the EM
> field which radiates.
>
> This is in addition to "Pin One-like" problems with termination of the
> mains "green wire" at the chassis at the point of entry, or not. In
> products with line filters, it's pretty common for noise current to be
> emitted on the green wire, which radiates.
>
> 73, Jim K9YC
>
>
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