Load summary

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kencoel

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I have a 3 phase panel. The A phase reads at 78.84 the B phase reads 61.19 and the C phase reads 50.14 amps. Does this mean that the load at the time of the reading is the three combined for a total load amps of 190.17 ?
 
I have a 3 phase panel. The A phase reads at 78.84 the B phase reads 61.19 and the C phase reads 50.14 amps. Does this mean that the load at the time of the reading is the three combined for a total load amps of 190.17 ?

No.
Adding the currents like that is a bit meaningless.
 
Load Calculating

Load Calculating

(...continued from a previous post.) I am trying to determine how to figure the full load amps of an existing commercial kitchen panel. I have read each leg of each phase during peak hours and added in some new load/amps for some kitchen equipment. I need to submit this information for a permit. The A phase reads 78.84 amps, the B phase reads 61.19 amps and the C phase reads 50.14 all included with the new equipment turned on. How do you determine what the Total load amps for this panel would be? Thanks.
 
Does this mean that the load at the time of the reading is the three combined for a total load amps of 190.17 ?

No. All you care about is the amps on each "phase conductor:. The only time you would add them is when you have several conductors that combine into a single conductor (i.e. circuit 1 + circuit 2 pigtailed into a single feeder).

It does not matter if this is three-phase or single-phase, "total load amps" created by adding amps from different phase conductors is a meaningless number.
 
I have a 3 phase panel. The A phase reads at 78.84 the B phase reads 61.19 and the C phase reads 50.14 amps. Does this mean that the load at the time of the reading is the three combined for a total load amps of 190.17 ?

No. The max your panel is drawing is 78.84 amps.
 
I predict that a lecture from charlie b is fast approaching. :D
You are too kind. :D

I'll keep it simple. Read posts #3 and #7.

Oh, and if you divide your 190.17 by 3, and get about 63.4, you can use this to get a reasonable (if no precisely accurate) idea of the load on you panel.

(Edited to correct post numbers, after having combined two threads into one.)
 
Last edited:
NOTE: The originator started a second thread, rather than post additional comments on this thread, withoujt actually addressing a separate issue. I have combined the two threads into one, since we do not allow duplicate threads.

Please continue the discussion here.
 
090115-1322 EST

Adding the magnitude of the three currents is not necessarily meaningless.

Suppose the entire load is resistive, it is a Y system, and the neutral is connected.

Then as an approximation --- the total load power assuming a balanced source voltage is
Power total = Vline to neutral * (Iline1 + Iline2 + Iline3).
Make it a delta load load and it is still
Power total = Vline to line * (Iline1 + Iline2 + Iline3) / Sq-root of 3.

.
 
090115-1322 EST

Adding the magnitude of the three currents is not necessarily meaningless.

Suppose the entire load is resistive, it is a Y system, and the neutral is connected.
Gar -
(hard to get the tone of voice right with my keyboard - picture a non-antagonistic Ryan penguin slap comming:rolleyes::rolleyes:)
You are way too sharp for this comment. I'm going to attribute the comment to a tongue-in cheek. (I know, "Smile when you say that, stranger" I am:D)

cf
 
Adding the magnitude of the three currents is not necessarily meaningless.
I said "total load amps" is a meaningless number.

gar said:
Suppose the entire load is resistive, it is a Y system, and the neutral is connected.
Now you are changing the OP. But my post is still valid.
jim dungar said:
The only time you would add them is when you have several conductors that combine into a single conductor

At the neutral point of a wye, you combining several conductors into one.
 
090115-1322 est

adding the magnitude of the three currents is not necessarily meaningless.

Suppose the entire load is resistive, it is a y system, and the neutral is connected.

Then as an approximation --- the total load power assuming a balanced source voltage is
power total = vline to neutral * (iline1 + iline2 + iline3).
Make it a delta load load and it is still
power total = vline to line * (iline1 + iline2 + iline3) / sq-root of 3.

.

p= sqrt(3)*{[(v1*i1)+(v2*i2)+(v3*i3)]/3}
 
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