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DC Motor Starters

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About DC Motor Starters

DC motor starters combine a controller (most often a contactor) with overload protection, allowing a motor or motor-controlled equipment to be turned on and off. There are many different types of products. Multi-speed DC motor starters are designed to be operated at a constant frequency and voltage. Reduced voltage starters (RVS) also change speeds, but use motor windings that can be reconnected to form different numbers of poles. Reducing or reversing DC motor starters are designed for applications which must avoid overload conditions, or which need to avoid unnecessary wear and tear on equipment. There are five main types of reduced voltage starters: primary resistor, autotransformer, part winding, wye delta, and solid state. Full voltage, non-reversing DC motor starters have an overload relay and two contactors. These contactors are mechanically and electrically interlocked. Manual DC motor starters are also commonly available. They connect the incoming power directly to the motor, and are well-suited for squirrel-cage motors. 

DC motor starters use three types of overload protection: eutectic, bimetallic, and solid-state. Eutectic overload relays consist of a eutectic (melting) alloy and a heater coil. When an overload occurs, the coil heats the tube. When the tube melts, a tripping device initiates a switching action. Bimetallic overload relays are made of two metal strips that are joined together permanently. Because metals expand and contract at different rates, heating the bimetallic strips causes it to bend. In turn, a spring pulls the contacts apart and breaks the circuit. Solid-state relays for DC motor starters do not generate heat to trip a circuit. Instead, they measure current or a change in resistance. Solid-state overload protection may also provide advanced functions such as ambient temperature sensing, programmable trip-time, and current-change detection. DC motor starters with low voltage protection, phase failure (loss) trip, and phase reversal (unbalance) trip are also available. 

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Engineering Web: DC Motor Starters

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Electric Motors & DC Motors
This section is split into the electric motor type: AC motors, DC motors, stepper motors and electrical drives.
Motor Starters | Machine Design
Full-voltage, single-speed motor starters: Single-speed squirrel-cage motors have starters that fall into two categories: full-voltage or
Electric motor - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The modern DC motor was invented by accident in 1873, when Zénobe Gramme connected the dynamo he had invented to a second similar unit, driving it as
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