batman2010
Electrical
- May 28, 2010
- 31
Hello folks,
I am working on a project that involves (8) 3 phase, 480V, 75HP pumps fed from an existing MCC. We are replacing those pumps with new ones at the same HP ratings. The existing starters in the MCC have circuit breakers as an overcurrent protection rated at 150A. According to the NEC code the pumps full load current is 96A and with multiplying it by 2.5 I get 240A or 250A the next available standard rating. Now the right way of doing it is to use a 3P-250A breaker for each pump but the existing condition of the MCC limits the use of 3P-150A otherwise the whole MCC has to be changed, now I am worried if we order 8 new starters with 3P-150A breakers that those breakers would trip at some point when the pumps start although the current ones didn't trip but maybe the new pumps have different start up curves that the use of 3P-250A is needed? I know 250A breaker is the max allowed by code but isn't 150A a big drop from the maximum(250A) ?
I am working on a project that involves (8) 3 phase, 480V, 75HP pumps fed from an existing MCC. We are replacing those pumps with new ones at the same HP ratings. The existing starters in the MCC have circuit breakers as an overcurrent protection rated at 150A. According to the NEC code the pumps full load current is 96A and with multiplying it by 2.5 I get 240A or 250A the next available standard rating. Now the right way of doing it is to use a 3P-250A breaker for each pump but the existing condition of the MCC limits the use of 3P-150A otherwise the whole MCC has to be changed, now I am worried if we order 8 new starters with 3P-150A breakers that those breakers would trip at some point when the pumps start although the current ones didn't trip but maybe the new pumps have different start up curves that the use of 3P-250A is needed? I know 250A breaker is the max allowed by code but isn't 150A a big drop from the maximum(250A) ?