Lakevillethor, I will attempt to answer your question as I understand it...
RLA Running Load Amperage.
This is the typical Amps required to just run the unit, the expected current.
FLA Full Load Amperage.
This is the maximum sustainable current draw. The circuit must be able to handle this all day on a hot day. Typically the max amps and hot day will coincide. The system breaker and wiring must be rated at this or higher.
LRA Locked Rotor Amperage
This is the current drawn when the contacts first close. A refrigeration compressor is just about the most brutal thing you'll come across with respect to starting inrush current. Often it is an inertial load, (crankshaft and piston), the piston almost always at bottom dead center, often with about 400PSI on top of it. This makes the motor work very, very hard to get things moving. Clearly one of the 6-10 times running current to get going motors you always hear about. This is part of the reason they actually list the LRA for refrigeration compressors.
In practice before electrical circuit breakers were used motor starter units had resistors hooked up with the fuses. The actual values of these resistors were semi-critical for the system to allow starting but also protect the circuit from running overloaded continuously. The LRA value was used for calculating the aforementioned resistors. Now days you generally look at the FLA bump up a few amps and then wire the system for that. If you have excessively long runs you need to start bumping up the wire sizes relatively quickly or the motor will have a shortened life as the LRA will be around roasting things much longer. One point is that the circuit breaker used MUST be rated for refrigeration. They look the same cost 30% more and work right. Often I see standard breakers in that service. They heat up and often cause nuisance tripping, lost produce, hair pulling.
Refrigeration is the most common large, often serious electrical load in business. They run long and hot. They WILL demonstrate this wherever the circuitry is sub par. They will melt things. They will explode things. You will find whole subpanels utterly destroyed, unsalvageable. You will find breakers backs burnt off. A poor wire nut connection WILL toast.
Is was this what you were looking for?