Ahh, so I have irritated yet another VFD salesman or engineer who would like to pass off the VFD as a “perpetual motion machine”. Sorry, the volts/herts ratio thing is not new. But it has absolutely nothing to do with the power needed by the pump to supply the flow and head required. No matter how you supply the power, it still has to be enough to spin the pump and deliver the flow and head needed.
You are right that I maybe lacking in some of the “latest” improvements to VFD’s. This is because there have been so many “upgrades” I can’t keep up. Ever since I started working with VFD’s some 25+ years ago, they have made major changes every 12 to 18 months, trying to solve some of the inherent problems. I have tried to keep up. But in the process I may have forgotten a lot about VFD’s.
With every “upgrade” VFD’s have gotten better at reducing stray voltage, harmonics, voltage spikes, bearing currents, and skipping critical speeds. Yet the problems from VFD’s are caused by “laws of physics” and can never actually be solved. With every upgrade VFD’s have gotten easier to program, smaller, lighter, and cheaper. But no matter how many “upgrades”, they will never be able to “break the laws of physics”. It is always going to take X amount of energy to produce Y amount of gallons at Z head in feet, no matter how you spin the pump.
The problem has always been that VFD experts want to forget that head is the most important part of pumping. I don’t know how many VFD articles I have read that are completely incorrect. The VFD expert will say “reducing HP by the cube of the speed means a 100 HP pump slowed by 50% will only use 12.5 HP”.
This is completely neglecting the fact that head is reduced by the square of the speed. Reducing the pump speed by 50%, also reduces the head or lift by 75%, which means it quit pumping a long time ago. Typically a pumps speed can only be reduced by 10% at the most, and still produce enough head to get water out of the well or to the top of a water tower. Reducing the speed by 10% means reducing the power required by only 27%, not by 87.5% as VFD salespersons would like for you to believe.
If you know how to read a pump curve, you can see that the power required is naturally reduced by about 50%, simply by reducing the flow rate, without changing the pump speed at all. So a VFD is just trying to trick a pump into doing something it already does naturally, and VFD salespersons would like to keep that fact from being understood. Going on about “internal PI loops, volts/hertz ratios, and monitoring power output is just “baffling with BS”, because there is nothing brilliant about it. A VFD will never be a perpetual motion machine no matter how complicated you make it sound.
The vile and venom spewed by VFD proponents is reminiscent of what Columbus must have experienced when he tried to explain that the world in not flat. But all the vile and venom that ever existed does not change the fact that the earth is actually round, and VFD’s do not save energy.
Therefore Mr VFD, no discredit to your knowledge of VFD’s, but you are the one lacking in technology regarding the natural characteristics of pumps .. put that in your VFD and .... it!