As waross said, for the conductors going TO the VFD, the NEC requires using 125% of the MAX. INPUT CURRENT rating of the VFD, not the load connected to it; so 125% of 8.2A. The OCPD is sized then to protect the conductors. But in your specific case, regardless of the values you use, you will be using minimum 14ga wire anyway.
But it's all relative as well. If the VFD requires an OCPD that is SMALLER than what would protect the conductors, you must go with that. That would be stated in the VFD installation guidelines. So for example, you may use 14ga wire that is technically rated for 15A, but the VFD manual may say that you must have a 10A fuse in front of it. If that's the case, the 10A is not violating the NEC because it is LOWER than the conductor protection, so no problem. If on the other hand the VFD manual said to use a minimum 30A fuse or breaker, and you ran 14ga wire, you cannot protect that wire with a 30A breaker, you must use a 15A. Either that or run 10ga wire. The 10ga wire is of course a LOT larger than the minimum 125% of the VFD input current, so no problem there.
For the conductors going TO the motors, follow the standard NEC rules for motor conductors, i.e. 125% of FLC of 2.21A. The Motor Thermal Overload protection of the VFD is protecting those conductors.
If you have more than one motor behind the VFD, you technically need new Short Circuit protection for the conductors as well. You were not clear as to how many VFDs vs how many motors you have.
For the FLC rating of the machine, you would need to base it on the FLC rating of the VFD, the 8.2A. but for the "largest Motor" rating, I would use the actual motor value. That information is somewhat useless anyway, so just follow the exact wording.
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