Not sure if this should go in the tower clock area or electrical horology forum, but it has to do with an electric synchronous motor
Background
I care for a tower clock in a church in the inner city of Cleveland OH. It's a Seth Thomas #16 that an unscrupulous clock repair company electrified in the 1940s. They took away many of the mechanical parts and installed an electric motor and gear reduction box. The motor was missing – probably burned out. I took out the clock, cleaned it up, replaced the motor, and reinstalled everything about nine years ago. The motor is a ~1/10th HP, 1800 rpm synchronous motor that is geared way down.
The Problem
The City of Cleveland power supply is not very reliable in this part of town so there are sporadic power failures. When that happens, I have to climb the clock tower to reset the time – and I'm getting tired of that.
I want to install an Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) to keep the clock running when the power is down. Here is my concern: The motor is of the synchronous type that relies on a steady and accurate 60 Hz frequency. A UPS, when activated, generates a synthetic sine wave of 60 Hz but I don't know how accurate it is. I can buy a UPS and put it on my oscilloscope to compare it with the line frequency or connect it to a frequency meter – and maybe have to return the UPS and try another model or brand. So my question is – has anyone used a UPS to power a synchronous motor to maintain accurate time keeping? If so, what brand / model UPS did you use?
Thanks.
Frank
Background
I care for a tower clock in a church in the inner city of Cleveland OH. It's a Seth Thomas #16 that an unscrupulous clock repair company electrified in the 1940s. They took away many of the mechanical parts and installed an electric motor and gear reduction box. The motor was missing – probably burned out. I took out the clock, cleaned it up, replaced the motor, and reinstalled everything about nine years ago. The motor is a ~1/10th HP, 1800 rpm synchronous motor that is geared way down.
The Problem
The City of Cleveland power supply is not very reliable in this part of town so there are sporadic power failures. When that happens, I have to climb the clock tower to reset the time – and I'm getting tired of that.
I want to install an Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) to keep the clock running when the power is down. Here is my concern: The motor is of the synchronous type that relies on a steady and accurate 60 Hz frequency. A UPS, when activated, generates a synthetic sine wave of 60 Hz but I don't know how accurate it is. I can buy a UPS and put it on my oscilloscope to compare it with the line frequency or connect it to a frequency meter – and maybe have to return the UPS and try another model or brand. So my question is – has anyone used a UPS to power a synchronous motor to maintain accurate time keeping? If so, what brand / model UPS did you use?
Thanks.
Frank