Amber Gold
03-03-2022, 10:24 PM
I have a Atlas Copco GVS25 vacuum pump w/ 3-phase motor that's on its 5th season. Oil is changed every year and have had zero issues with it until now. Below is everything that happened, in the hopes that someone knows what happened, so I can keep it from happening again and/or help someone else out. Thanks in advance for any help.
Tuesday, watching my security camera, I notice vac levels drop over the course of the day, but then no vac. Pump shut off. I'm thinking there's leaks and the moisture trap filled up, shutting the pump off...no big deal. Nope, vac. pump off and moisture trap empty. Look around some more and find all the vac. pump oil on the pump shed floor. Check the pump site gage no oil...not good. My guess is the pump lost all oil, pump siezed, overloaded the motor, VFD shut things down to protect the motor. Take the pump home, check it over, and can't find anything wrong with it. No cracks in the pump casing, no oil on the motor (like if the mechanical seal blew), nothing. Refill with oil, turn it over a bunch by hand (seems OK??), and bring it back to the woods. Hook it back up, start it up, and after a rough start, clears up and runs. However, every once in a while, you can hear the motor load up, pump stops turning, motor tries harder, and pump starts spinning again. It'll do this 3-4 times then run fine again for a while, and then repeat. Vac levels are 29"+ with the woods valves closed, 28" ish with the woods open (things are froze), so it appears the pump can still make good vac. At this point, not sure if I can trust it all night, so I shut it off to revisit in the morning.
Wednesday morning, start the pump up again and same thing: runs fine for a while, motor goes under heavier load, pump stops, motor overcomes it, starts spinning again, repeats 3-4 times, and then runs fine for a while. I babysit it for a couple hours, and then for that last hour, the pump doesn't bind up at all...just runs smooth, so I leave it running. I go back that night, and still running, it pulled 25" ish vac all day, and oil level is still good. I leave it running.
Today, I bring a multimeter and test it. 121V each leg going into the VFD with motor leg readings of 131V, 133V and 138V. I have no baseline to know if the motor voltages are good or bad. Do those numbers mean anything to anyone?
So, my questions:
How/why did the pump dump all the oil out? The exhaust vents outside, so it didn't come from there.
Not sure if there's damage to the pump head, but it seems to pull the same vac levels as it did before...29"+ on just the releaser. Although, I'm not sure if the pump's CFM capacity has been reduced.
My guess for the reason why the pump was binding up has something to do with it siezing, but I'm guessing what happened internally has resolved itself from it being continuously operated.
Anything I should do differently? Additional maintenance?
Tuesday, watching my security camera, I notice vac levels drop over the course of the day, but then no vac. Pump shut off. I'm thinking there's leaks and the moisture trap filled up, shutting the pump off...no big deal. Nope, vac. pump off and moisture trap empty. Look around some more and find all the vac. pump oil on the pump shed floor. Check the pump site gage no oil...not good. My guess is the pump lost all oil, pump siezed, overloaded the motor, VFD shut things down to protect the motor. Take the pump home, check it over, and can't find anything wrong with it. No cracks in the pump casing, no oil on the motor (like if the mechanical seal blew), nothing. Refill with oil, turn it over a bunch by hand (seems OK??), and bring it back to the woods. Hook it back up, start it up, and after a rough start, clears up and runs. However, every once in a while, you can hear the motor load up, pump stops turning, motor tries harder, and pump starts spinning again. It'll do this 3-4 times then run fine again for a while, and then repeat. Vac levels are 29"+ with the woods valves closed, 28" ish with the woods open (things are froze), so it appears the pump can still make good vac. At this point, not sure if I can trust it all night, so I shut it off to revisit in the morning.
Wednesday morning, start the pump up again and same thing: runs fine for a while, motor goes under heavier load, pump stops, motor overcomes it, starts spinning again, repeats 3-4 times, and then runs fine for a while. I babysit it for a couple hours, and then for that last hour, the pump doesn't bind up at all...just runs smooth, so I leave it running. I go back that night, and still running, it pulled 25" ish vac all day, and oil level is still good. I leave it running.
Today, I bring a multimeter and test it. 121V each leg going into the VFD with motor leg readings of 131V, 133V and 138V. I have no baseline to know if the motor voltages are good or bad. Do those numbers mean anything to anyone?
So, my questions:
How/why did the pump dump all the oil out? The exhaust vents outside, so it didn't come from there.
Not sure if there's damage to the pump head, but it seems to pull the same vac levels as it did before...29"+ on just the releaser. Although, I'm not sure if the pump's CFM capacity has been reduced.
My guess for the reason why the pump was binding up has something to do with it siezing, but I'm guessing what happened internally has resolved itself from it being continuously operated.
Anything I should do differently? Additional maintenance?