Coolguy,
I just replaced my motor with an equivelant HP 2 speed motor. I'm beginning to think I should have went down to 1.5 HP for my application, but now that I did it I will make the best of it. I purchased a relay, and a switch to deal with the speed selection. Now I need to make a time delay circuit so that the pump comes on at HIGH speed from anywhere between 3 minutes to 1 hour, and then switches to low speed for the rest of the pump ON time. Time delay relays are usually large, and expensive, so I plan on making my own timer circuit. The idea is to hide all this inside my Intermatic 1102 timer (the one with freeze protection).
Playing with motor speed with a single speed motor is possible, not recommended, and pretty complicated. This is often done with commercial 3 phase motors that employ variable speed by changing the voltage, and frequency simultaniously, i.e. lower speed means lower voltage, and lower rotating field frequency. I have actually done this with a single phase induction motor, but doing so took a lot of equipment, and it was only to prove the concept. Starting the motor is tricky too. For us pool folk, pick a motor designed for two speeds, and go for a swim!
Does anybody out there know or have data relating power factor of 2 speed motors for both LOW and HIGH speed?
Jimmy
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