eeinpa
Electrical
- Nov 12, 2006
- 65
Howdy. I'm an EE who has worked in the design of industrial control products. I'm now looking at the application of these products in some power designs. Please pardon my ignorance due to this fact!
I'm looking at a control panel for a machine (pump) which has a 100 hp electric motor, 3 hp cooling fan motor, and 5kW electric heater. I emphasize these are all parts of one machine. I am confused as to fuse requirements for this arrangement, because the small loads are such a tiny fraction of the load current for the entire panel.
As all devices are part of "one machine", I believe NEC would permit one disconnect to serve the entire panel. That could be a fusible disconnect for the entire panel, with 175A fuses feeding a large power distribution block. The small motor and heater could come off the PDB (conductors 1/3 ampacity of main) and have small (e.g. CC) fuses before their respective starter and contactor.
Must the 100 hp motor have a redundant set of fuses before its starter? It seems rather silly (and expensive) to have a main fused disconnect with 175A fuses followed by a set of 175A fuses for the main motor just to be able to tap <10 amps off for the heater or cooler (they generally would not be on together).
Thank you for helping me better understand the requirements.
I'm looking at a control panel for a machine (pump) which has a 100 hp electric motor, 3 hp cooling fan motor, and 5kW electric heater. I emphasize these are all parts of one machine. I am confused as to fuse requirements for this arrangement, because the small loads are such a tiny fraction of the load current for the entire panel.
As all devices are part of "one machine", I believe NEC would permit one disconnect to serve the entire panel. That could be a fusible disconnect for the entire panel, with 175A fuses feeding a large power distribution block. The small motor and heater could come off the PDB (conductors 1/3 ampacity of main) and have small (e.g. CC) fuses before their respective starter and contactor.
Must the 100 hp motor have a redundant set of fuses before its starter? It seems rather silly (and expensive) to have a main fused disconnect with 175A fuses followed by a set of 175A fuses for the main motor just to be able to tap <10 amps off for the heater or cooler (they generally would not be on together).
Thank you for helping me better understand the requirements.