Ok examples single phase motor 1.5 Hp draw 7 amp
And when I convert single phase motor 1.5 Hp to 3 phase motor 1.5 ph using VfD primary coming to is drawing 8.5 amp
and some how we are seeing significant saving using 3 phase motor ?
So are these actual measurements you have taken? 1.5HP 230V single phase motor should be around 10A, so 7A sounds like a measurement under load. Was the load exactly the same when running from the new 3 phase motor and VFD?
In general, the current for the EXACT SAME LOAD fed from a single phase source will be higher than the 3 phase current by the square root of 3 (1.732). So if the motor was drawing 7 amps as a single phase motor, then the current for running the EXACT SAME LOAD on a 3 phase motor would be LOWER by that factor, so 4A on the 3 phase motor. But the
single phase current FEEDING the VFD will still be 7A, PLUS the losses inside of the VFD, roughly 3%, so roughly 7.2A. If the INPUT current of the VFD is 8.5A, there is either a significant difference in the LOAD on the motor, or a measurement error.
Also:
What is the machine?
How are you measuring current?
Who told you that switching to a 3 phase motor was going to be giving you "significant savings"? Energy savings ONLY happen when you can eliminate LOSSES in a system. If it is a centrifugal machine, like a
centrifugal pump or fan, and only if
variable flow is a part of the application, that can work. If you do have a centrifugal pump and
you always run it at full speed with the VFD, it WILL actually consume MORE power than if you just ran it across-the-line. But if you varied the flow with a valve, and now instead you vary the flow by changing the motor speed, then the savings are potentially very significant because you are eliminating the losses associated with the valve and the motor running needlessly at full speed. So without knowing anything about how the VFD is being used, there is no way to speculate on any savings (or losses).