by Tony » Mon Feb 18, 2008 4:06 pm
Jesse, the problem with wiring two motors in series directly across 220v is the manner in which they fail.
Something like a light bulb just goes *pop* and always fails open circuit. So it is entirely practical to wire light bulbs in series and supply them from a higher voltage. If one fails, they all go out, with no damage to the remaining bulbs.
The type of motors we are discussing very rarely go open circuit. It can happen, but it would be quite unusual. Much more likely the motors will overheat, burn out, and fail shorted.
Typically, either the field winding or the commutator starts to burn, and the insulation progressively fails. The motor runs hotter and hotter, until it finally either goes bang, bursts into flames, of blows a fuse or trips a circuit breaker.
If two motors are connected in series the motor that is self destructing tries to draw more current, and this increases the voltage across the good motor.
The good motor starts to over speed and run hot because it may be receiving far higher than 110 volts, anything up to the full 220 volts is possible. So the good motor is usually either damaged or destroyed as well.
By connecting the neutral wire to the center point, each motor can only ever receive a maximum of 110 volts no matter what any other motor is doing. A single motor can still fail, but it will not directly kill any of the others.
Also known as the infamous "Warpspeed" on some other Forums.