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Motor wiring and noise

This technical article describes shielding, grounding, and splicing techniques for use with motor wiring. This article covers the following topics:

Motor wiring guidelines (Cable shielding, grounding and splicing techniques)
Motor wiring guidelines (Cable shielding, grounding and splicing techniques) - photo credit: instructables.com
  1. Understanding noise in motor power wiring
  2. Shielding motor power cables
  3. Grounding motor power cable shields
  4. Applying ferrite sleeves
  5. Splicing motor power cables
  6. Handling excess cable
  7. Installing long motor cables

1. Understanding noise in motor power wiring

The PWM Drive (pulse-width modulated drive) to motor power conductors are typically the most intense noise source in a system. Proper implementation of shielding, grounding, splicing, and treatment of excess cable is essential to reducing noise in your system.

In the figure below:

  • The unshielded conductors radiate an electric noise field that couples capacitively with adjacent wiring.
  • Stray capacitance at A & C cause ground currents to flow creating a magnetic noise field that couples inductively with adjacent wiring.
Motor power cable noise
Figure 1 – Motor power cable noise (click to expand)

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2. Shielding motor power cables

The benefits of using shielded cable are listed below (also refer to Figure 2 below).

  1. The shield strongly attenuates the electric field (E field) noise.
  2. Core to shield capacitance is added to the stray capacitance at A & C increasing ground currents in the loop A, C, D, E, and F.
  3. These currents generate a magnetic field (H field).

It is important to minimize the area of this loop as far as possible by routing the cable close to grounded metalwork.

Shielded motor power cable
Figure 2 – Shielded motor power cable (click to expand)

3. Grounding motor power cable shields

Observe the following guidelines when bonding the motor power cable shield to ground. Bond motor power cable shields:

  • At the motor frame.
  • To the panel at entry to the cabinet (optional).
  • To the drive (amplifier) chassis. If a connection point is not provided, bond to the adjacent panel.
These connections must be made at the circular section, not by creating pigtails.

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4. Applying ferrite sleeves

A ferrite sleeve around the three power conductors as they leave the drive will help to reduce common-mode noise current. Take all three conductors two or three times through the core. If it runs hot reduce the number of turns.

Note! Not all drives allow the use of a ferrite sleeve around power conductors. Refer to your manuafacturer’s manual for specific applications.

5. Splicing motor power cables

Avoid splicing motor power cables when ever possible. Ideally, motor power cables should run continuous between the drive and motor terminals. The most common reason for splicing is to incorporate high-flex cable for continuous flexing applications.

If necessary, the preferred method of splicing is to use a fully shielded bulkhead connector!

Splicing can also be accomplished using a grounded and shielded junction box, as shown in the figure below.

Spliced cable using junction box
Figure 3 – Spliced cable using junction box

Observe the following guidelines when installing a junction box:

  1. Shield drain wire must be spliced only to mating shield drain wires and not grounded at the junction box.
  2. Feedback shields must be passed through pin for pin.
  3. Separate junction boxes for power and feedback are required.

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6. Handling Excess Cable

Observe the following guidelines when handling excess cable:

  1. Do not coil excess cable of different types (i.e. motor power and feedback) together. An efficient transformer is formed at HF.
  2. Cable lengths should ideally be trimmed to fit the application.
  3. If excess cable cannot be trimmed, it should be laid in an ‘S’ or figure eight pattern (refer to the figure below).
Excess cable treatment
Figure 4 – Excess cable treatment

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7. Installing long motor cables

Motor cables are defined as long when the motor frame is not bonded close enough to the drive panel to be considered a single ground plane. To be considered a single ground plane, the parts must be connected by a surface which is no longer than ten times its width.

Observe the following guidelines when installing long motor cables:

  1. Bonding should be by the widest practical means. Wide cable tray is effective when it is made of zinc plated steel and carefully bonded at the ends to control panel and motor frame.
  2. Zinc plated sheet steel channel is also effective. The fact that the width is folded into a U shape does not matter. A closing lid helps.
  3. Solid steel conduit bonded at both ends is effective.
  4. The spiral construction of flexible conduit makes it less attractive for RF shielding because the spiral shape forms an inductor, even with partially shorted turns.

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Reference // System Design for Control of Electrical Noise by Rockwell Automation

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author-pic

Edvard Csanyi

Electrical engineer, programmer and founder of EEP. Highly specialized for design of LV/MV switchgears and LV high power busbar trunking (<6300A) in power substations, commercial buildings and industry facilities. Professional in AutoCAD programming.

4 Comments


  1. LANADI MARVIN
    Feb 07, 2022

    THE SIMPLE AND THE FIRSTEST METHODS OF CONNECTING MOTOR


  2. bolle
    Mar 15, 2017

    very helpfull grounding and shielding article.


  3. Ojas Kulkarni
    Sep 06, 2016

    Dear Edvard,

    The article is very informative. I would like to ask you if there is any thumb rule about capacity of motor drive to shielding area of cable. Many times we are unaware about the shielding being sufficient enough for the noise of motor. Kindly share this information .

    Regards
    OJAS


  4. chromexu
    Sep 06, 2016

    i would like this artcle

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