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Asynchronous Motors - Electrical Data

Electrical motor data - nominal current, fuse, start


ampere, contactor and circuit breaker of
asynchronous motors
The table below can used to determine electrical data for common
asynchronous 380 Voltage motors.
Nominal Star - Delta Circuit
Directly Star - Delta
current contactor Breaker
KW HP Fused Started
- In - - In - - In -
(A) (A)
(A) (A) (A)
0.2 0.3 0.7 2 2 16
0.33 0.5 1.1 2 2 16
0.5 0.7 1.4 2 2 16
0.8 1.1 2.1 4 4 16
1.1 1.5 2.6 4 4 16
1.5 2 3.6 6 4 (16)22 16
2.2 3 5.0 10 6 (16)22 16
3 4 6.6 16 10 (16)22 16
4 5.5 8.5 20 16 (16)22 16
5.5 7.5 11.5 25 20 (16)22 16
7.5 10 15.5 35 25 (25)22 25
11 15 22.2 35 35 (40)30 40
15 20 30 50 35 (40)30 40
22 30 44 63 50 (63)/60 60
30 40 57 80 63 (63)/60 60
45 66 85 125 100 90 100
55 75 104 160 125 110 100
75 100 140 200 160 150 200
90 125 168 225 200 220 200
110 150 205 300 250 220 200
132 180 245 400 300 300 400
160 220 290 430 300 300 400
200 270 360 500 430 480 400
240 325 430 630 500 480 480
Full-voltage, single-speed motor starters
Full-voltage starters (manual and magnetic) apply full voltage directly to motor
terminals.

Reduced-voltage, single-speed motor starters


Some machines or loads may require a gentle start and smooth acceleration up to full
speed.
Many starters apply reduced voltage to motor windings; primary resistor, primary
reactor, autotransformer, and solid state. Part winding and wye-delta starters can also
provide reduced-voltage starting, although technically they are not reduced-voltage
starters.

Motor Protection
Motors should have protection for themselves, the branch circuit, and the feeder line.
Protection, provided by fuses and circuit breakers, guards against fault conditions
caused by short circuits or grounds and over currents exceeding locked-rotor values.

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