edited to add; I'm a slow poster. So added to what charlie said:
Met with a customer who wants me to bring more circuits into his emergency generator backup panel so that his normal load is at least 30% of the generators capacity. The generator looks really old and says it does 486amp at 120/208 which is what he has. My understanding was to get the total combined load from all the 3 phases to equal at least 146amps. I accomplished this and now he is wondering if I need to hit 146amp on each individual phase. I told him that I would check, but I thought it would be all combined because that is the total load the generator is producing altogether. What are your thoughts, I'd like to know if I'm wrong.
Need to? You don't need to load it at all. If in fact the generator is rated for 486a, that gives you 162a/phase, not 146. What's the KW and KVA ratings and the output breaker size? If the calculated or measured load is greater than 162a/phase, there will be a problem. Might be worth a call to the manufacturer or their local rep.
First you (all) really need to get rid of this concept of adding the current magnitudes from each phase. That practice is of no use in 3 phase - the number is meaningless.
If the generator nameplate says the FLA is "486A", then, if the gen is fully loaded, that is what you would measure with an ammeter on each phase.
Again, if the nameplate does in fact say 208/120, 3 phase, 486A, (and probably .8pf) then the gen is likely a 140kw machine. So, if the owner wants the machine loaded (engine power loading) to 30%, that is 42kw. For a resistive load (1.0pf), the current will be about 117A. Please note this is the current that will be measured on each of the three legs.
iceworm