Alan Vogel
Member
- Location
- Forest Hill, MD
I have researched on many websites and through many of Mike Holt's forums and have found varying answers and views on this topic. When designing new projects we only get the horsepower rating of the elevator during such an early stage of the project, but a crucial stage in design. We typically base the elevator circuits/feeders off of the horsepower rating only and NEC 433.250 FLC numbers.
I received the below information from TK elevator which lists their standard motor information.
40HP
208V 3ph
"Motor Nameplate Data"
RATED AC AMPS: 122.5
"Full Load Up High Speed"
Motor AC amps: 172
Control Amps: 4
Total Amps: 176
My confusion (and it seems like everyone else is confused because I find varying answers across the forums/websites) is which amperage is used to base feeder/branch circuit wiring and OCP breaker sizing? It seems unrealistic to base wire/OCP sizing for a 40hp motor using the 172 amps which is characteristic of a 60hp motor...doesn't make sense. Also, we typically would not have the 172 motor amps, 4 control amps and the 176 total amps available to us since the elevator vendor is selected during construction and not design phase.
Any clarification you could provide would be greatly appreciated. In addition to clarifying FLA vs RLA...seems like many forums are confused on this as well. May be a good instructional video clip for Mike!
I received the below information from TK elevator which lists their standard motor information.
40HP
208V 3ph
"Motor Nameplate Data"
RATED AC AMPS: 122.5
"Full Load Up High Speed"
Motor AC amps: 172
Control Amps: 4
Total Amps: 176
My confusion (and it seems like everyone else is confused because I find varying answers across the forums/websites) is which amperage is used to base feeder/branch circuit wiring and OCP breaker sizing? It seems unrealistic to base wire/OCP sizing for a 40hp motor using the 172 amps which is characteristic of a 60hp motor...doesn't make sense. Also, we typically would not have the 172 motor amps, 4 control amps and the 176 total amps available to us since the elevator vendor is selected during construction and not design phase.
Any clarification you could provide would be greatly appreciated. In addition to clarifying FLA vs RLA...seems like many forums are confused on this as well. May be a good instructional video clip for Mike!