This is a matter of some debate. I have always done it like this and have never been red-tagged:
- It would fall under Article 210 if the reactor is in the BRANCH circuit, defined as the OCPD being the last protective device before the load. So the 4 individual reactors, if put DOWNSREAM of the breakers, would be covered by 210.20 and all it implies and since the line reactor must be sized per the VFD input current anyway, the OCPD for the VFD covers the protection of the reactor.
- If done as one large reactor feeding the 4 separate drives, the upstream OCPD becomes a "Feeder", so 215.3 would apply, requiring that the OCPD be no more than 125% of the rated equipment. So the reactor would have to be rated for at least 320A (400A/1.25).
A matter of debate perhaps. . . not as much as opening a kettle of fish.
It will beg for reactions (expressed or unexpressed) not only in this forum but the whole academia.
This forum has a wide reach in terms of readership. . . globally as a matter of fact. (thanks for the magic of Mr. Google)
Anything that we say here will live in perpetuity. . . and any opinion that we offer can be subjected to scrutiny.
This is not to say that one's opinion is a total hogwash. I won't say that one's opinion is hogwash simply because it is outside my line of reasoning.
This often misunderstood that reactors are solely for mitigating harmonics protection of VFDs-- which have been beaten to death in this discussion like a dead horse.
Reactors are there for several reasons which I will mention a few in relevance to this discussion.
1. Bringing the facility in compliance with utility standards.
2. Avoid litigation and damage settlements.
3. Improving true power factor.
4. Reducing cross-talk between drives.
5. Prevent fuse and circuit breakers from blowing and tripping due to high current spikes.
6. Protection of capacitors and other system components from harmonic resonance.
Above list is just a fraction of a complete list of reasons why reactors are there. It seems that most of what we see here is mostly evidence of posters being caught up with just one issue. . . the harmonics and their effects.
Seeing a full view of the forest is completely obscured because of the trees.
I will focus on the first three on the list since this presents contention on what I mentioned on my earlier post.
This was even made an issue.
OP's notion that reactors are rated like energy-consuming appliance is misguided. They are not rated on how much current they will draw like a motor for example.
Science had proven through earlier experimenters like Faraday, Newton and others that their studies that pertain to modern reactors help in reducing in-rush current and thus minimize nuisance tripping of OCPDs.
Reactors are rated in percent (%) of the
voltage and current and are deployed-- based on what these reactors are intended to be used.
Hence, often mandated by energy suppliers. The City of LA requires
power factor improvement and it is a must under penalty or surcharges if not complied with.
If I may invoke
Newton's Law of Energy Preservation-- and further studies that resulted in
Lenz Law which states:
“When electromagnetic energy is induced, the resulting EMF opposes the cause of its production.”
As with with all coiled wires, like reactors, it resists change.
Had this
LAW never existed, anytime we turn on any energy consuming apparatus will endlessly continue to consume unopposed until all energy is either transformed to heat or dissipate into thin air.
Energy is not lost—it remains in the air. We cannot create energy, we can only transform it.
Thanks for Uncle Isaac and the German scientist
Heinrich Lenz.
Further, how electromagnetic circuits obey
Newton's Third Law of Motion--as presented in mathematical equations by Heinrich Lenz, offers us a better understanding of this third law of energy conservation by Newton.
Hallelujah!