What effect will be there on the motor (Induction) output power when a 100kW 50hz motor is connected to a 60hz power supply.
The motor will draw a higher ampere against its rated current at 60 hz and the motor will burn out in the long run.
no
No, the voltage of 500 volts is too high to operate a 380 volt motor.
Yes. It will make your motor a little faster though, so it depends on what you are powering with this motor. IE Can the piece of eguipment be ran faster?
It will not work at all.
no
One way would be to hook it up to a supply (by itself, with no load) and measure the speed with a contact tachometer. If your supply is 60Hz, and the motor speed corresponded to one of the standard motor speeds, it would be a pretty safe bet you had a 60Hz motor. If the speed was about 20% faster than a standard speed, the motor is probably a 50Hz motor. Or 20% slower if you were running a 60Hz motor on 50Hz For instance, a 1750 RPM 50Hz motor would spin at about 2100 RPM if you ran it on 60Hz.
No! Normally not, the recistance in the windings is to hig on 60Hz and the pump motor has not power enough to work propelly. This happened to myself when I connected my Whirpool AWE 7519 to 230V 60Hz. Europian model for 50Hz.
Depends on the current rating which should be on the motor.
No, the voltage of 500 volts is too high to operate a 380 volt motor.
Yes, however, the RPM will increase by 20%, if the motor is connected to a shaft or driving something that can not handle the torque, then you might run to heating issues or performance issues.
You need a 5.5kw generator to run a 5.5kw motor.
100
230V/1Ph/50Hz 1HP (0.75 kW)Motor Capacitor start induction motor ( single phase)
Yes. It will make your motor a little faster though, so it depends on what you are powering with this motor. IE Can the piece of eguipment be ran faster?
It will not work at all.