HT motor rewinding step-by-step

HT Motor Rewinding: A Complete 7-Step Guide for Engineers

Introduction

A poorly rewound HT motor fails within 6 to 12 months. A precision rewound one lasts 15+ years with proper maintenance.

Yet many industrial buyers focus only on price, ignoring the process that determines quality, efficiency, and lifespan.

If you manage high-voltage motors (3.3kV, 6.6kV, or 11kV) in cement plants, refineries, steel mills, power stations, or water treatment facilities, this guide is for you.

We will walk through the correct 7-step rewinding process used by ISO-certified repair shops. By the end, you will know exactly what questions to ask your next rewinding service provider.


Step 1: Pre-Dismantling Diagnostics

Why it matters: Rewinding without finding the root cause guarantees a repeat failure.

Before removing a single bolt, a competent rewinder performs a failure analysis to answer one question: Why did this motor fail?

Minimum tests before strip-down:

TestWhat It MeasuresAcceptable Range (for HT motors)
Insulation Resistance (IR)Overall insulation health>100 MΩ at 5000V megger
Polarization Index (PI)Moisture & contamination>2.0 (for Class F insulation)
Winding ResistancePhase balance, loose connectionsAll phases within ±2%
High Voltage (HV) TestDielectric strength2 x rated voltage + 1000V for 1 min

Red flags that change the rewind approach:

  • Low IR + low PI → Moisture issue → Requires baking before strip-down
  • Unbalanced winding resistance → Loose or burned connection internally
  • HV test failure → Major insulation breakdown

Tip for readers: If a rewinder offers a quote without asking for your failure report or performing these tests, consider another vendor.


Step 2: Core Loss Testing

The hidden danger: Most motor failures leave the stator core damaged. If you rewind a motor with a damaged core, efficiency drops by 10-30% and heat buildup will kill the new winding within months.

What is core loss testing?

The stator core is made of laminated silicon steel sheets. Each sheet has an insulating coating. When the coating burns or shortens between sheets, eddy currents circulate and heat the core unevenly.

The Loop Test (Heat Run) procedure:

  1. A test coil is wound around the stator core
  2. Low voltage, high current is applied (typically 10-15% of rated flux)
  3. The core heats up naturally
  4. A thermal camera scans for hotspots

Reading the results:

Core ConditionHotspot Temperature RiseAction Required
Good<10°C above ambientProceed with rewinding
Acceptable10-20°C above ambientMonitor; may be acceptable for non-critical motors
Damaged>20°C localized hotspotCore restacking or motor replacement

⚠️ Warning: Some low-cost rewinders skip core testing entirely. Do not accept this. A thermal image scan takes 30 minutes and saves your new winding.


Step 3: Stripping the Old Winding

Once the core is confirmed good, the old winding must be removed without damaging the core laminations.

Two methods compared:

MethodProcessRisk LevelQuality Result
Controlled burn-off ovenHeated to 350-400°C in oxygen-controlled environmentLow – if properly controlledExcellent
Open-flame burningDirect flame on statorVery High – warps laminationsPoor (never accept this)
Chemical strippingSolvents dissolve varnishLowVery good (but messy)

What to ask your rewinder:

“Do you use a controlled burn-off oven or chemical stripping? Can I see your temperature logs?”

If they say “open flame” – leave immediately. This practice destroys the magnetic properties of the core.


Step 4: Coil Manufacturing

The coil is the heart of your HT motor. Its quality determines the motor’s voltage withstand capability, temperature rating, and service life.

Materials used in HT motor coils:

ComponentMaterialWhy It Matters
ConductorElectrolytic copper (99.9% pure)Low resistance, high conductivity
Primary insulationMica tape (muscovite/phlogopite)High dielectric strength, heat resistant
Secondary insulationPolyester film or glass fiber clothMechanical protection
Impregnation resinClass F or H VPI resinFills voids, prevents partial discharge

Voltage class determines insulation thickness:

Motor VoltageMinimum Mica Tape LayersTypical Coil Build
3.3kV4-6 layersStandard ground wrap
6.6kV8-10 layersDouble mica + stress grading
11kV12+ layersFull mica + corona protection

Coil manufacturing steps:

  1. Winding— Copper wire or strip is wound into precise shape
  2. Pressing – Coil is compressed to exact dimensions
  3. Taping – Mica tape applied layer by layer (either by hand or machine)
  4. Curing – Tape adhesive is heat-set
  5. Testing – Each coil is hi-pot tested before insertion

Tip: Ask if your rewinder uses vacuum pressure impregnation (VPI) or standard dip-and-bake. VPI produces void-free insulation and is superior for HT motors above 6.6 kV.


Step 5: Coil Insertion & Wedging

Skilled labor is critical here. Improper coil placement creates phase-to-phase or phase-to-ground faults.

The insertion process:

  1. Slot preparation – Slots are cleaned, inspected, and insulated with slot liner
  2. Coil placement – Bottom coils inserted first, then top coils
  3. Separation – Phase insulation placed between coil groups
  4. Wedging – Wedges driven into slot openings to hold coils firmly

Wedge types:

Wedge MaterialBest ForAdvantage
Magnetic (iron-filled epoxy)High-efficiency motorsReduces slot leakage reactance
Non-magnetic (glass-polyester)Standard HT motorsLower cost, good mechanical strength
Semi-conductiveVFD-fed motorsPrevents corona in slot

Common insertion defects to avoid:

  • Loose coils → Vibration → Insulation wear → Ground fault
  • Pinched insulation → Immediate weakness → Early failure
  • Incorrect phase grouping → Wrong rotation or unbalanced currents

Step 6: Connections & Bracing

The end-winding (the part of the coil outside the stator slots) is the most vulnerable area during motor starting and operation.

Connection methods:

MethodQualityBest For
BrazingExcellent – low resistance, high strengthAll HT motors (preferred)
SolderingPoor – melts at high temperatureNot recommended for HT
Crimping + brazingVery goodLarge conductors, field repairs

End-winding bracing requirements:

Without proper bracing, electromagnetic forces during starting can move coils by several millimeters, rubbing insulation until failure.

Minimum bracing for HT motors:

  • Glass tape – Wrapped around coil groups
  • Polyester or glass cord – Tied between coil ends
  • Resin coating – Applied over taped connections (optional but recommended)

For high-vibration applications (crushers, mills, compressors):

Request heavy-duty bracing – double glass tape + epoxy resin encapsulation of the entire end-winding.


Step 7: Final Impregnation & Quality Testing

The last step seals everything together and proves the rewind is ready for service.

Impregnation methods:

MethodVoid FillDielectric StrengthCostRecommended for
Dip & bake (standard)70-80%GoodLow3.3kV, non-critical
VPI (Vacuum Pressure Impregnation)95-98%ExcellentHighAll HT motors, especially >6.6 kV
Trickle impregnation80-85%Very goodMediumSmall HT motors

Final test sequence (after impregnation & curing):

TestStandardPass Criteria
Insulation ResistanceIEEE 43>1000 MΩ minimum ( >5000 MΩ preferred)
Polarization IndexIEEE 43>2.0
DC Hi-PotIEEE 95No breakdown at 2 x rated voltage + 1000V
Surge Comparison TestIEEE 522No divergence between phases
Winding ResistanceIEEE 118Phases balanced within ±2%
No-Load RunSite acceptanceSmooth operation, no abnormal noise, current balanced

Before shipping:

  • Vibration test (if balancing was performed on the complete rotor assembly)
  • Thermal imaging (after no-load run for 30+ minutes)

Quality Checklist: 7 Questions to Ask Your Rewinder

Before awarding your HT motor rewind contract, ask these questions:

#QuestionWhy It Matters
1“Do you perform core loss testing before stripping?”Prevents efficiency loss
2“Do you use a burn-off oven or open flame?”Open flame destroys core
3“Do you use VPI or dip-and-bake?”VPI is superior for HT
4“How many layers of mica tape for my voltage class?”Confirms insulation knowledge
5“Do you brace end-windings with glass tape?”Prevents vibration damage
6“Do you perform surge comparison testing?”Catches turn-to-turn faults
7“What warranty do you offer?”Confidence in quality

Conclusion: Quality Rewinding Saves Money Long-Term

A low-cost rewind might save you $1,000 today, but it will cost you:

  • 30% higher electricity bills (due to increased core loss)
  • Unplanned downtime (production losses of 5,0005,000–50,000 per hour)
  • A second rewind within 12-18 months

A quality rewind costs more upfront but delivers the following:

  • 25+ years of reliable service
  • Original or better efficiency
  • Peace of mind

Need an HT Motor Rewind Done Right?

We specialize in high-voltage motor rewinding for industrial applications:

  • Voltage range: 3.3kV, 6.6kV, 11kV
  • Power range: 100kW to 10MW
  • Industries: Cement, steel, power, oil & gas, water treatment

Get a free assessment:

📞 Call us: 0091 9071110022
📧 Email: technopowerkey@gmail.com
🌐 Visit: https://emrs.in/

Send us your motor nameplate photo – we will reply with a quote at the earliest.

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