ABB VFD Fault 7121 — What It Means
ABB VFD fault 7121 is a motor stall fault. The drive detected that the motor speed dropped to near-zero or below a minimum threshold while the drive was still commanding torque — meaning the motor rotor has stalled. The stall protection function (parameter group 28 on ACS series drives) monitors the ratio of output frequency to actual motor speed via encoder or estimated speed. When a discrepancy indicating stall persists beyond the configured time limit, the drive trips on fault 7121 and shuts down to prevent motor winding damage from prolonged locked-rotor current.
Common Causes
- Mechanical overload or jam — The driven load (pump, fan, conveyor, compressor) seized, jammed, or became overloaded beyond the motor’s breakaway torque at the current operating frequency.
- Stall detection parameters too sensitive — Parameters 28.11 (stall time) or 28.12 (stall frequency) are configured too aggressively for the application. A motor legitimately running at low speed under high load can trigger false stall trips.
- Insufficient torque boost at low speed — If the V/Hz curve is not optimized for the load (particularly on high-inertia or high-friction loads), the motor may stall when accelerating against significant starting torque.
- Encoder signal loss (closed-loop drives) — On drives using encoder feedback, a failed encoder or noisy encoder signal causes the drive to calculate zero or negative speed, triggering the stall algorithm even if the motor is running.
Step-by-Step Fix {#fix}
- Check for mechanical jam — Decouple the motor from the load if possible and attempt to run the motor unloaded. If it runs without fault, the problem is mechanical on the load side. Identify and clear the jam or overload condition.
- Review the load for increased friction or binding — If the load was previously running fine, check for bearing failure, a seized coupling, a stuck valve, or material buildup that’s added resistance.
- Check stall protection parameters — In the ABB drive parameter menu, navigate to group 28 (Motor Protection). Review parameters 28.11 (stall time) and 28.12 (stall frequency). Increase the stall time or reduce the stall frequency limit to reduce false trips if the load requires time to accelerate.
- Review torque boost settings — On V/Hz drives, check parameter 28.15 (IR compensation) or the custom V/Hz boost settings. Increase boost voltage slightly for high-torque starting loads.
- Check encoder wiring (if applicable) — On closed-loop configurations, verify encoder wiring shield, power supply voltage, and signal integrity. An intermittent encoder causes erratic speed feedback.
Parts Often Needed
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Load-side bearings or coupling | Amazon | Most common mechanical cause on pumps and fans |
| Encoder (incremental or absolute) | Amazon | Replace if speed feedback is confirmed erratic on closed-loop drives |
| Drive control board | Amazon | Replace only if stall detection circuit is confirmed defective |
When to Call a Pro
If the motor stalls under normal load conditions that previously posed no issue, the motor may be losing efficiency due to winding degradation. Motor insulation testing (megger) and a load analysis by an electrical engineer can determine whether the motor or drive parameters are the root cause.