We have two large electric-powered pumps for evacuating a drainage pond; the pump motors are serviced by 3-phase delta 230VAC; each is on a magnetic starter with overcurrent protection, plus separate soft-start controllers for each motor.
Pump motor #2 is very old and no longer has a name plate; it draws 60A (measured) on each leg under load.
Pump motor #1 is just a few years old with the following specs: 40HP, Cont Duty, SF 1.15, 230VAC 60Hz, 100.0A, 117.0A (SF), PF 84.3, Max KVAR 10.2, Code F, Des B. This motor draws 114A (measured) on each leg under load.
Both pumps are automatically operated by a controller with on- & off-level float switch inputs. The controller alternates the activation of each pump to keep both exercised. There is also an alarm-level float that will energize both pumps if the water continues to rise after one pump is operating.
Ok, so on to the electric service. Here's where things get a bit "interesting"...
Outside on a pole, there's the meter base and a cutoff panel housing a 3-phase 100A (!) main OCPD. From there, four 2AWG copper CCC's and a 6AWG solid copper EGC pass through liquid-tight flex to the pump house where it enters a subpanel. The three hot legs from the outside cutoff panel are double-lugged on the subpanel bus with the three 2AWG copper CCC's that feed the branch circuit for pump motor #1. The branch circuit for Pump #2 (old) comes off a 3-phase 100A breaker in this subpanel.

The three 2AWG copper feeds for Pump #1 (new) goes from the double-lugged bus connectors in the subpanel to a fusible disconnect switch with 150A TD fuses.

From there, three 4AWG copper CCC's are routed to another wall in the pump house where they enter a second fusible disconnect switch with 125A TD fuses; this panel also contains the motor's mag starter.

Obviously, the service is insufficient for the load, even with the pump controller "alarm" condition disabled (so that both pump motors will never both be energized). Pump #2 (old) runs just fine on the existing service, but pump #1 (new) will sometimes trip the main 100A breaker in the outside cut-off panel. So we intend to upgrade the service to 200A. But it seems that the pump motor branch circuits probably need to be re-wired as well.
Also, it seems to me that the two fusible disconnect panels, wired in series for pump #1, are superfluous. I'm thinking, for pump #1, to run a new feeder from the soon-to-be-installed 200A main cut-off breaker directly to the second fusible disconnect (the panel with the mag starter for pump #1). I could then use the first fusible disconnect for pump #2 (not using the 100A breaker in the subpanel). Do you agree with this plan?
Also, it is my understanding that double-lugging is a violation (unless the lugs are specifically L&L for that). Would you recommend Polaris connectors inside the cut-off panel for the three feeder circuits (subpanel, pump motor #1, pump motor #2)?
So now for the conductor sizing questions (all copper THHN)...
1. If I do use one fusible disconnect panel for each pump motor, how should I size the feeder conductors from the 200A main cut-off breaker to the hot lugs in the fusible disconnect panels? Can the feeder conductors be sized for the loads on each branch circuit? Or do I need to size the feeder conductors to the 200A rating of the OCPD. If so, then I believe that would force the sizing to be 3/0 copper (and I'd probably have to put the taps for the feeders inside the wireway above the subpanel ).
2. Pump motor #2 has no name plate so I cannot calculate the FLC. But given that it draws 60A under load and it's currently wired using 4AWG copper THHN, should I just leave that as is?
3. By my calculations, the branch circuit conductors for pump motor #1 are undersized. From NEC Table 430.250, the FLC is 104A. Sizing it to 125% (430.22A) means a conductor ampacity of 130A. Thus 1AWG. Correct? Btw, wouldn't this also mean the TD fuses should be sized at 175% FLC = 183A (200A standard fuse)?
Thanks for your assistance!
Pump motor #2 is very old and no longer has a name plate; it draws 60A (measured) on each leg under load.
Pump motor #1 is just a few years old with the following specs: 40HP, Cont Duty, SF 1.15, 230VAC 60Hz, 100.0A, 117.0A (SF), PF 84.3, Max KVAR 10.2, Code F, Des B. This motor draws 114A (measured) on each leg under load.
Both pumps are automatically operated by a controller with on- & off-level float switch inputs. The controller alternates the activation of each pump to keep both exercised. There is also an alarm-level float that will energize both pumps if the water continues to rise after one pump is operating.
Ok, so on to the electric service. Here's where things get a bit "interesting"...
Outside on a pole, there's the meter base and a cutoff panel housing a 3-phase 100A (!) main OCPD. From there, four 2AWG copper CCC's and a 6AWG solid copper EGC pass through liquid-tight flex to the pump house where it enters a subpanel. The three hot legs from the outside cutoff panel are double-lugged on the subpanel bus with the three 2AWG copper CCC's that feed the branch circuit for pump motor #1. The branch circuit for Pump #2 (old) comes off a 3-phase 100A breaker in this subpanel.

The three 2AWG copper feeds for Pump #1 (new) goes from the double-lugged bus connectors in the subpanel to a fusible disconnect switch with 150A TD fuses.

From there, three 4AWG copper CCC's are routed to another wall in the pump house where they enter a second fusible disconnect switch with 125A TD fuses; this panel also contains the motor's mag starter.

Obviously, the service is insufficient for the load, even with the pump controller "alarm" condition disabled (so that both pump motors will never both be energized). Pump #2 (old) runs just fine on the existing service, but pump #1 (new) will sometimes trip the main 100A breaker in the outside cut-off panel. So we intend to upgrade the service to 200A. But it seems that the pump motor branch circuits probably need to be re-wired as well.
Also, it seems to me that the two fusible disconnect panels, wired in series for pump #1, are superfluous. I'm thinking, for pump #1, to run a new feeder from the soon-to-be-installed 200A main cut-off breaker directly to the second fusible disconnect (the panel with the mag starter for pump #1). I could then use the first fusible disconnect for pump #2 (not using the 100A breaker in the subpanel). Do you agree with this plan?
Also, it is my understanding that double-lugging is a violation (unless the lugs are specifically L&L for that). Would you recommend Polaris connectors inside the cut-off panel for the three feeder circuits (subpanel, pump motor #1, pump motor #2)?
So now for the conductor sizing questions (all copper THHN)...
1. If I do use one fusible disconnect panel for each pump motor, how should I size the feeder conductors from the 200A main cut-off breaker to the hot lugs in the fusible disconnect panels? Can the feeder conductors be sized for the loads on each branch circuit? Or do I need to size the feeder conductors to the 200A rating of the OCPD. If so, then I believe that would force the sizing to be 3/0 copper (and I'd probably have to put the taps for the feeders inside the wireway above the subpanel ).
2. Pump motor #2 has no name plate so I cannot calculate the FLC. But given that it draws 60A under load and it's currently wired using 4AWG copper THHN, should I just leave that as is?
3. By my calculations, the branch circuit conductors for pump motor #1 are undersized. From NEC Table 430.250, the FLC is 104A. Sizing it to 125% (430.22A) means a conductor ampacity of 130A. Thus 1AWG. Correct? Btw, wouldn't this also mean the TD fuses should be sized at 175% FLC = 183A (200A standard fuse)?
Thanks for your assistance!