Saturday, January 16, 2010

Pump control with inverter drive?

I have a single phase pump that works by vibrating a membrane. It has no motor as such and no rotating parts. It just vibrates at the frequency of the supply. I need to control the pump by varying the frequency and would like to do this with an inverter drive. It seems all the inverter drives I see are single phase to three phase. Can I just join all three phases together and then reduce the frequency by 1/3 to acheive or maybe just use one phase of a 3 phase inverter?Pump control with inverter drive?
You could possibly address the paradigms and perameters of this conundrum with a ratchet drive caliphlex proximiter...mounted in the succubus of the rear vendom vectorate of the square of the hypoteneuse..try that..and good luck with your pump~!Pump control with inverter drive?
Get a balloon and blow it up but don't tie it off. If you stretch the opening in the balloon and allow the air to escape slowly you can create a squeaking noise, like an annoying drone (reminds me of a certain bear I know). By increasing or decreasing the tension on the opening you can alter the harmonic frequency. The variation in harmonic frequency shoud do the trick (the low farting noise should be slow and the high shrieking noise should be fast).
Yes! Yes! YES! YESYESYESYESYES! Oh, yesyesyesyes! yes...yesss....





(Oooh, my friend with a purse is sooooo lucky!)
you'll need a servo amplifier with microfarad capacitors connected in series.
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