cryan
Well-Known Member
On Large alternators polarity can be reversed if current is fed into it in the wrong direction. This should be protected against by the reverse power circuitry but this can fail and I have seen electricians jump start the polarity back to the correct direction with a battery. Incidentally in such occasions the alternator will jump about on its mounts as if it were mechanically unbalanced. I have never seen it happen on small alternators as fitted to yacht or car engines?
What is this all about? Are others too shy to ask? The output polarity of an alternator is dictated by the diodes and their connections. Voltage alternating from +ve to -ve comes out of the actual alternator before the rectifiers. In the case of a true alternator giving AC then polarity is not a question.
If the DC supply to the field coils of any alternator are revered then it will still provide AC with no concern except the Ac will be out of phase. not a concern un;less there are 2 alternators paralleled. So what is Cryan referring too? olewill
Your right I have got myself confused. Well spotted.
I was referring to issues surrounding a reverse powering of an alternator with a reverse in polarity.
Infact I got so confused that your query forced me to look up exactly what it was I was thinking about and had witnessed a ships electrician do?
This is what I was on about: REVERSE POWER
If, for any reason, one machine is allowed to slow to a point where the other machine is taking all the electrical load, the zero load generator then goes to a negative value or “reverse power.” This generator has now become a motor. This situation is of particular concern where the machine’s protective scheme has not been designed to operate properly in the motoring situation. In such conditions reverse-current relays are usually employed to trip the generator on detection of reverse power flow.
Results of Motorization of a Generator
If a generator loses prime mover power, it acts as a motor with a dc field on the rotor. The dc field will cause the rotor to try and follow the ac field in the same direction as before. If the mechanical drag on the rotor is heavy, it will fall behind and “slip poles,” inducing a large voltage into the rotor; this can cause insulation breakdown of the windings, flashover at the brushes, and violent shaking of the generator mountings.
If a generator loses dc excitation to the rotor it won't generate, but the prime mover power will still turn the rotor. Now the generator acts as a motor running at no load.
The DC excitation can be re-induced with a battery, I think its called flashing?
Apologies.
Last edited: