ahoyhoy
New User
- Location
- Olympic Peninsula, WA
- Occupation
- Marine Electrician
Hello all!
I am a marine electrician based in Washington State, working on a massive genset compared to my typical installations. I'm usually working with 12kw 120/240v gensets, so to be working with a 75kw 120/208y 3 phase gen is a little intimidating, and I want to make sure I'm sizing everything appropriately.
I used the following formula to calculate the output breaker: FLA = (kW × 1000) / (Voltage × Power Factor × √3)
75000 / (208 x .8 x 1.73) = 260.53
For this type of vessel, we can only use 115% of the Full Load Rating for the genset overcurrent protection, leaving me with a 300A breaker.
The cable is run in open air in the engine room of the boat, and is rated to 105c. The genset is only about 10' from the breaker, and most calculators agree I'm looking at 3/0 cables for the output. Never having worked with AC loads this large, this seems freakishly huge to me, but 300A is a lot after all... What is really tripping me up though is that for the old genset that I am replacing, it looks like the installer only ran 1AWG to the 300A breaker, which is making me second-guess myself.
I am a marine electrician based in Washington State, working on a massive genset compared to my typical installations. I'm usually working with 12kw 120/240v gensets, so to be working with a 75kw 120/208y 3 phase gen is a little intimidating, and I want to make sure I'm sizing everything appropriately.
I used the following formula to calculate the output breaker: FLA = (kW × 1000) / (Voltage × Power Factor × √3)
75000 / (208 x .8 x 1.73) = 260.53
For this type of vessel, we can only use 115% of the Full Load Rating for the genset overcurrent protection, leaving me with a 300A breaker.
The cable is run in open air in the engine room of the boat, and is rated to 105c. The genset is only about 10' from the breaker, and most calculators agree I'm looking at 3/0 cables for the output. Never having worked with AC loads this large, this seems freakishly huge to me, but 300A is a lot after all... What is really tripping me up though is that for the old genset that I am replacing, it looks like the installer only ran 1AWG to the 300A breaker, which is making me second-guess myself.