MagnaDrive Corporation Selected as a Technology of the Year for 2001
by IndustryWeek Magazine
M A G N A D R I V E
A D J U S T A B L E
S P E E D D R I V E
IMAGINE AN EASY-TO-INSTALL INDUSTRIAL
technology that reduces energy consumption,
eliminates mechanical vibrations
and electronic harmonics, relaxes alignment
tolerances and cuts maintenance needs.
Sound too good to be true?
“This is something that no one even knew
was possible,” says Ken Black, senior applications
engineer for MagnaDrive Corp.,
Seattle. “This is a new animal in the zoo.”
The MagnaDrive Adjustable Speed Drive
(ASD) is based on the principles of standard
AC eddy current variable speed drives but
does not need an AC motor to create the
electromagnetic fields. The MagnaDrive
ASD uses powerful rare-earth Neodymiumironboron (NdFeB) magnets that are far
more powerful than conventional iron magnets. The magnets, which became
commercially
available in the early 1980s, retain
their properties for more than 2,000 years
and endure temperatures up to 350 F.
“I see this technology as so innovative and
so disruptive to rotating equipment, that I believe
there will be applications that are going
to drastically change how industry manages
torque in the future because of it,” says Ron
Woodard, president and CEO of MagnaDrive.
In the construction of a MagnaDrive ASD, a
plate studded with NdFeB magnets is connected
to the system load, while a copper conducting
plate is connected to the motor. As the motor rotates,
the relative motion between the magnets
and the copper plate creates a magnetic force
arising from eddy currents induced in the copper
plate. This force causes the load to turn. The
I W , DECEMBER 2 0 0 1 / J A N U A R Y 2 0 0 2 w w w . i n d u s t r y w e e k . c o m
amount of torque applied to the load is controlled by
the width of the air gap between the motor and load.
A smaller air gap increases the magnetic fields at the
copper plate and increases the torque.
THE ASD DELIVERS THE ENERGY SAVINGS
and speed control benefits associated
with variable frequency drives (VFDs)
but is easier to install and maintain
because it is a mechanical rather than a computer/
electronic technology. According to
MagnaDrive, installations of their ASDs have
allowed motors to be run with energy savings of
up to 66% depending upon the application.
Additionally, the MagnaDrive ASD differs
from conventional drives by having the motor disconnected
from the load. Vibrations that may
occur on one side of the air gap are not transmitted,
meaning less wear on motor parts, lower
maintenance costs, and increased motor life when
compared with conventional drives. This disconnection
also enables the motor to be run on inconsistent
electrical power, unlike VFD systems,
which can be damaged by inconsistent power.
This can be a significant advantage in emerging
Schematic drawing of the MagnaDrive ASD in a
pump/motor system.
markets. Another advantage of the motor/load disconnection
is that it enables the MagnaDrive ASD
to be “soft started.” It allows the motor to operate
at its optimum running torque and eliminates the
need for a higher start-up torque, which is needed
with conventional motors because they have to
start themselves and the load simultaneously. In
the MagnaDrive ASD, the motor and load can be
started separately. In a number of MagnaDrive
ASD installations, this allows the use of smaller
motors and eliminates power spikes or brownouts.
To date, MagnaDrive ASDs have been used
primarily in retrofitting existing systems where
vibration, energy consumption or maintenance
costs were known problems. The company
started full-scale sales in 2001 and, as of October,
has 56 installations at 36 customer sites.
Current customers span a variety of industries
including waste/wastewater treatment, pulp and
paper, HVAC, material processing, irrigation,
food processing and power generation.
The Rock Creek Wastewater Treatment Facility
in Hillsboro, Ore., installed a MagnaDrive ASD on
one of two 60 horsepower motors that were con-
stantly being replaced due to excess vibration.
“[We were looking for] a lower maintenance, lower
tech alternative to variable frequency drives,” says
Nathan Cullen, principal engineer at Rock Creek.
Use of the ASD enabled the removal of a
bypass valve, the complete elimination of one
of the motors and the reduction of the remaining
motor from 60 horsepower to 20 horsepower.
According to Cullen, “No maintenance has
been required in the first year of operation,” an
improvement over the previous system.
PORTAC Inc., a supplier of lumber cut for
home construction, installed a MagnaDrive ASD
on a 125 horsepower belt drive draft fan located at
its Forks, Wash., facility. The existing system required
that the fan run at full speed, using dampers
to maintain the pressure in the system. Additionally,
there was a large amount of vibration to the
motor and nearby areas. The inclusion of a MagnaDrive
ASD allowed the dampers to be removed,
and the system to operate more efficiently. Dave
Claussen, plant manager at PORTAC, says the
initial benefit was a reduction in energy consumption
of more than 200,000 kilowatt-hours, saving
the facility more than $12,000 annually. PORTAC
also noticed a drastic reduction in equipment vibration
with corresponding reduced maintenance.
“We have VFDs all over our operation [but]
you can’t work on them yourself,” Claussen
says. “There are a multitude of things that can
fail, and they’re all electronic. MagnaDrive is
very simple. There’s not much to fail.”
Market potential for MagnaDrive ASDs is
attractive. Research by the Northwest Energy
Efficiency Alliance (NEEA) trade group,
Portland, Ore., estimates the speed control
market for MagnaDrive ASDs to be at $1.6 billion
per year, primarily concentrated in the
HVAC, industrial and wastewater system areas.
NEEA, which has a partnership with MagnaDrive,
further estimates that the international
market is more than double the U.S. market.
In January 2001 MagnaDrive was awarded a
$500,000 grant from the Department of Energy as
part of the National Industrial Competitiveness
Through Energy, Environment and
Economics program to implement the ASD technology
in industrial applications requiring larger
(500 to 1500 horsepower) motors. MagnaDrive
also is extending the principles behind its ASDs to
industrial couplings on constant speed drives in
the 20 to 1000 horsepower range. These Magna-
Guard couplings use the same magnetic torque
transfer principles and have just become available.
The company also is conducting research
into applications involving transportation and
maritime systems and is actively seeking
partners in these areas. IW FCHLOUPEK@INDUSTRYWEEK.COM
I W , DECEMBER 2 0 0 1 / J A N U A R Y 2 0 0 2 w w w . i n d u s t r y w e e k . c o m
FOR THE NINTH CONSECUTIVE YEAR,
INDUSTRYWEEK showcases its Technology
and Innovation Awards. IW
honors the creativity of visionary winners
who are seizing opportunities offered by
technology with hopes of demonstrating economic
leadership. They are the contributors
and winners in the wealth creation process that
could be called the Innovation Economy.
This year IW honors Technology Leader of
the Year Ralph J. Szygenda, group vice president
and CIO of General Motors Corp. As
GM’s first CIO, Szygenda’s mission is to use
the emerging power of information technology
to remake the automaker. His mandate:
reinvent product development, manufacturing
and marketing—and everything else at the
world’s largest manufacturing company.
IW also honors five Technologies of the
Year that could vie for what Harvard Business
School management guru Clayton M.
Christensen terms disruptive technologies.
These are innovations that have the potential
to abruptly change the conventional order of
things. Christensen uses the term to make the
critical distinction between sustaining technologies
that enhance current trends in an industry
and the disruptive forces unleashed by
innovation that herald the wave of the future.
INDUSTRYWEEK’s five Technologies of the
Year offer new opportunities for bigger plays
in the Innovation Economy.
To be considered for the 2002 Technology and Innovation
Awards competition, request an entry form and background
materials from Anita Schlott (aschlott@industryweek.
com), phone 216/931-9302 (fax 216/696-7670).
TECHNOLOGY LEADER OF THE YEAR
Ralph J. Szygenda
Group Vice President and Chief Information Officer
Information Systems and Services
General Motors Corp.
TECHNOLOGIES OF THE YEAR
AbioCor Implantable Replacement Heart
Abiomed Inc.
www.abiomed.com
Critical Reach Service Suite
Critical Reach Inc.
www.criticalreach.com
Intelligent Fixturing System
Lamb Technicon
www.lambtech.com
IX SPeeD Suite
ImpactXoft Corp.
www.ImpactXoft.com