I'm no quitter, but I sure know when I am wasting my time...

check to see if there is a control parameter that turns the brake function on / off. You should see a voltage when it is dumping to the resistor.
It may be set to "coast to stop" which inhibits the brake.
PS - I just noticed the drum switch which seems to have connection between the motor and the VFD? If so I hope you are not using it to interrupt the power from the VFD and the motor (on /off - forward / reverse). That will lead to VFD failure.
Or did you run both high (motor) and low voltage (vfd 10v dc control functions on/off- forward/ reverse) in the same conduit?
For the life of me I'm not seeing any setting to change to get the braking enabled, that aren't already enabled. Either I'm missing something (most likely) or the braking ***** for this large rotating mass..? I welcome any input on this braking issue. Maybe I need a different drive?
It's still tripping the VFD on motor stop. The drum switch is the start input to the drive. I just ran the conduit that way to keep things a little cleaner.
For the life of me I'm not seeing any setting to change to get the braking enabled, that aren't already enabled. Either I'm missing something (most likely) or the braking ***** for this large rotating mass..? I welcome any input on this braking issue. Maybe I need a different drive?
It's still tripping the VFD on motor stop.
^^^^^When in the decel ramp is the drive faulting?
What fault is the drive displaying?
What are F14 thru' F17 set to?
Regards large mass how fast are you able to accelerate up to speed? With 100% braking capability you should be able to decel at close to the same rate as accel.
Later SloDat stated moving the decel to 90 seconds got rid of the fault on stop. And the resistor was not building any heat after multiple stop events.
PS- page 63 of the manual shows, depending on VFD model, there may not be a braking circuit requiring an external braking resistor.
Can SloDat post the model numer so we can check the manual?I remember now. Just skimmed back earlier to find out what drive. No heat and no DC voltage going to the resistor.
Manual I've got doesn't show the chopper as optional. It's built in to the 2 HP and larger, which SloDat appears to have, and not available on 1 HP and fractional. Though it's certainly possible the drive doesn't have a chopper if it's an OEM special or something.
Can SloDat post the model numer so we can check the manual?
I took a stab at it from the picture and searched for a Teco fm50

From the invoice:
DBR-2002-C1TECO Dynamic Brake Resistor, 230V, 2HP **JNBR-150W100**$20.00
I’ll double check the terminal connections tonight. Last night the damn thing start/stopped about 6 times with no trip. I’d like it stop it a lot faster. I’m willing to buy a different vfd to get it stopping faster if anyone has a solid recommendation.
I see know reason it shouldn't
I have much bigger / mass and am stopping in program decal in the 1 second range.
Tonight I'll change F02 to 10 seconds, which is what I would like to have for a stop time. Do you suggest changing any of the braking settings?

Yes, we use Yaskawa drives. I find a lot of vfd program and run similar.A different drive?
I am still curious as to why it win't stop faster .
Agree it should be able to stop faster than 25s if it's capable of accelerating in 5s, at least in theory. I guess this raises the question of whether it's actually accelerating up to full speed in 5s?
thanks for the video, that is really great performance of that unit.F01: Accel time: 5 sec
F02: Decel time: 9 sec
F05 was set to 4. Changing it to 6 => 11 second accel and 30 second decel.
Changing F05 = 5 changing F02 to 9 => 6.5 second accel and 22 second decel.
This is running really nice and the decel is really fast for the machine. The drive is clearly limiting the decel to limit over voltage on the DC bus. It's working well. I hadn't played with F05 yet, 4 was the default curve.
Video of start and stop.




PS - on your disc sander, the resistor is a "20%" braking resistor - sort of like duty cycle. You could get a lower resistance / higher wattage and go to 50% or 70% and be ok. That will allow it to stop faster.
20% comes from the manufactures specs. "Upping the wattage" will do nothing except the resistor will not be as warm to the touch during the 26 seconds it is working. The braking is controlled by the dc buss voltage vs resistor value allowing the current of the field to dissipate - Ohm's law. Dump the current faster = better braking action.That resistor is more like 10% duty cycle. Upping the wattage might improve braking somewhat though dumping more heat into that small enclosure could cause problems.
Reducing resistance below the manufacturers recommendation is risky because it can nuke the chopper in the drive.