Dear Mr Dvhez
I have the following opinion for your information
A) I agreed with Mr RRaghunath
" the 50/5A could be core balance CT for the motor feeder to measure earth fault current.
The CT primary doesn't depend on the motor FLA and thus the ratio remains same for motors of different rating"
The (core balance CT) is easily recognized, that it is only [one piece] with [all three phase conductors going through it].
B) I have different opinion with Mr bacon4life
" A 50:5 CT sounds small but might be OK if it is has a Rating Factor of 4 and the meter inputs are rated at 20 amps continuous".
Measurement CT primary current rating usually are selected 1.25 to 1.5 x FLA, it is expected to indicate accurately the occasional overload for a short duration. It is [not] advisable to overload the primary continuously for a long duration. Note: motor starting is limited to a short duration, generally not exceeding 30s.
Most analogue (moving iron/moving coil Class 1) panel meters having compressed scale >2x full scale value. These meters are intended to read generally from say 20% to 120%. Starting current at 6-7 x FLA are not indicated accurately on the compressed scale. The CT is intended to saturate > 1.2 x the primary current rating. There is no value for current ratio accuracy
> 1.2 x primary current rating for measuring CT, per IEC.
C) In many cases, three different types of CTs are used, each for different purposes and with different requirements;
i) One Core balance CT for earth fault protection, see above A),
ii) One CT per phase conductor (total three CTs for three-phase system) for each phase current measurement. Usually a Class 1 [measuring CT] with primary current rating 1.25 to 1.5 x FLA ,
see above B).
iii) One CT per phase conductor (total three CTs for three-phase system) for each phase [over-current protection]. Usually a Class 5P5, 5P10 or 5P20 [protection CT] with the primary current rating 1.5 to 2 x FLA. These protection CTs come into function only when current > FLA and during [over-current faults].
D) Reference IEC 61869-2 for further detail.
Che Kuan Yau (Singapore)