jraef
Electrical
- May 29, 2002
- 11,364
I am involved in a project wherein I must educate an American company on the specific details of how contactors are selected via IEC standards and I have come across a statement in several manufacturer's descriptions for the AC-3 Utilization Category system that has me puzzled.
The part that puzzles me is the 20% of line voltage issue.
What the heck? Are they perhaps saying that the rating is assuming that the contactor will close at a specific point in the sine wave?
This statement is verbatim identical in several web sites where I was looking for information, so I am assuming that it must be copied from something within the IEC standard (I do not have access to a copy).paraphrased IEC 60947-4-1 said:AC-3
This category applies to squirrel cage motors where the breaking of the power contacts would occur while the motor is running. On closing, the contactor experiences an inrush which is 5 to 8 times the nominal motor current and at this instant, the voltage at the terminals is approximately 20% of the line voltage. Breaking remains easy.
The part that puzzles me is the 20% of line voltage issue.
What the heck? Are they perhaps saying that the rating is assuming that the contactor will close at a specific point in the sine wave?