Eng8492
Electrical
- Feb 25, 2013
- 27
We are designing a piece of equipment that will have a UL nameplate rating of 24O VAC because this is standard voltage at all of our customers. However, the equipment will contain a motor with a 230VAC on its nameplate because we cannot find a UL-recognized motor at 240VAC.
Past experience shows that UL will not accept UL-Recognized components if they are operated at higher than their nameplate spec with expensive additional testing. So UL will not accept a 230 VAC transformer in a device with a nameplate that says 240 VAC without expensive testing.
Is there some special rule that allows 230VAC motors to be accepted by UL when operated at 240 VAC without expensive testing?
Note- this question has nothing to do with whether a 230VAC motor will operate with 240VAC. Rather its about nameplate ratings and safety agencies.
Past experience shows that UL will not accept UL-Recognized components if they are operated at higher than their nameplate spec with expensive additional testing. So UL will not accept a 230 VAC transformer in a device with a nameplate that says 240 VAC without expensive testing.
Is there some special rule that allows 230VAC motors to be accepted by UL when operated at 240 VAC without expensive testing?
Note- this question has nothing to do with whether a 230VAC motor will operate with 240VAC. Rather its about nameplate ratings and safety agencies.