10 Engineering Information Issue 03/01
MICROMASTER 411 & COMBIMASTER 411 Operating Instructions
116
6SE6400-5CA00-0BP0
10.1 Current Limit and Overload Operation
The inverter will always protect itself, the motor and the system from possible
damage.
Where a short circuit exists on the output of the inverter, the unit will trip
almost instantaneously to protect itself.
In the event of short and/or long term
overload conditions, current limit protection now operates rapidly to reduce inverter
current and prevent a trip occurring.

Electronic Trip

This is a very fast current limit, which operates if there is a short circuit (line to line
or most of line to earth faults) on the output. It is a fixed level trip and operates
within a few microseconds.

Overload Limit

This is a very fast limit, which operates within a few microseconds and removes
some of the output pulses to limit the current and protect the inverter. If this pulse
dropping occurs during overload, the operating condition will usually recover and
the motor will continue to run without tripping.

Long Term Overload Limit

This is a slower limit which allows an overload of at least 60 seconds where the
current lies above the motor limit but below the Electronic Trip and Overload Limit.

Continuous Limit

This is the level set as the maximum continuous motor current. The inverter will
control the current to this level after other overloads have timed out.
Figure 10-1 illustrates the interaction of parameters associated with current limit.
Read Only parameters r0027, r0034, r0037 and r0067 help with fault diagnosis.