0% found this document useful (0 votes)
61 views20 pages

Electrical Sizing for HVAC Systems

This document provides guidelines for sizing conductors and overcurrent protection for hermetic motors used in air conditioning and refrigeration equipment according to NEC Article 440. Key points include: 1) Use the nameplate information on hermetic equipment for sizing conductors and protection. For a single motor, conductors must be sized at 125% of motor rating and overcurrent protection at 175% or 225% of motor rating. 2) For multiple motors, size conductors at 125% of largest motor rating plus all other motor ratings, and protection at the sum of all motor ratings. 3) Room air conditioners must have conductors sized at 125% of rating and cannot exceed 80% of

Uploaded by

julius
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
61 views20 pages

Electrical Sizing for HVAC Systems

This document provides guidelines for sizing conductors and overcurrent protection for hermetic motors used in air conditioning and refrigeration equipment according to NEC Article 440. Key points include: 1) Use the nameplate information on hermetic equipment for sizing conductors and protection. For a single motor, conductors must be sized at 125% of motor rating and overcurrent protection at 175% or 225% of motor rating. 2) For multiple motors, size conductors at 125% of largest motor rating plus all other motor ratings, and protection at the sum of all motor ratings. 3) Room air conditioners must have conductors sized at 125% of rating and cannot exceed 80% of

Uploaded by

julius
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 20

General Rules in Computing Service Entrance:

 Lights and outlet, size of conductor = 125% of continuous load + 100% of non
continuous load
 Motor conductor = motor amps +25%
 Motor breaker = 250% of motor amp
 Multi motor conductor = sum of all motor ratings plus 25% highest
 Multimotor breaker = sum of all motor ratings plus highest breaker rating (current of
highest breaker rating not included in the sum.
 Combination of motors and lights and outlets, conductor = sum of current non motor
loads (125% for continuous load) + sum of motor current load (with 25% for highest
motor current)
 Combination of motors and lights and outlets, breaker rating = sum of current non motor
loads (125% for continuous load) + sum of motor current load (with highest breaker
rating, where current of which is excluded)

Aircondition Computation

Air-Conditioning and Refrigeration Equipment


Aug. 15, 2013
Applying Art. 440 for sizing branch circuit overcurrent protective devices, branch circuit
conductors, and motor overload protection for hermetic motors

Motors for air conditioning and refrigeration equipment are special-purpose motors called
“hermetic,” meaning they’re sealed. They’re sealed because they’re in the same housing as the
compressor and are operating in refrigerant. Consequently, their cooling and other characteristics
differ from those of non-hermetic motors.

For these motors, Art. 440 supplements or amends the rules in Art. 430 and other Articles in the
NEC. Household refrigerators and freezers, drinking water coolers, and beverage-dispensing
machines are appliances, so their installation must also comply with Art. 422 for appliances
[440.3(C)].

Ampacity and rating

The manufacturers of hermetic systems supply the correct protection, conductor sizing, and other
information on the equipment nameplate. Use this information when wiring an air conditioner or
other hermetic motor equipment.

Article 440 provides details for sizing branch circuit overcurrent protective devices (OCPDs),
branch circuit conductors, and motor overload protection in Parts III, IV, and VI, respectively
(Part V provides requirements for the controllers). Understanding those requirements can help
avoid confusion, so we’ll look at those shortly. You’ll find the general requirements for sizing
conductors and OCPDs in 440.4 through 440.6.

If you have multiple motors and/or other loads on the branch circuit, you must run through the
same calculations you’d do if these were regular motors [430.24]. In this case, consider the
highest-rated (largest) motor to be the one with the highest rated-load current [440.7].

Size feeder conductors and OCPDs per Art. 430 Part II and Part V, respectively. If a feeder
supplies a hermetic motor directly, treat it as a branch circuit in regard to Art. 440.

Disconnecting Means

For a hermetic refrigerant motor compressor, the ampere rating must be at least 115% of the
nameplate rated-load current or branch circuit selection current (whichever is greater) [440.12(A)
(1)].

An attachment plug and receptacle can serve as the disconnecting means for cord-connected
room air conditioners, household refrigerators and freezers, drinking water coolers, and beverage
dispensers [440.13].

You can mount the disconnecting means on or within the air-conditioning equipment, but you
can’t locate it on panels designed to allow access to the equipment — or where it will obscure
the equipment nameplate.
Fig. 1. Per 440.14, the disconnect must be within sight from and readily accessible to the
equipment.

Locate the disconnect within sight of and readily accessible from the equipment [440.14] (Fig.
1).  Per Art. 100 “within sight” means it’s visible and not more than 50 ft away. Article 440
provides two exceptions:

Exception 1: You don’t need a disconnecting means within sight from the equipment if the:

• Disconnecting means can be individually locked in the open position.

• Equipment is essential to an industrial process in a facility that has written safety procedures.

• Conditions of maintenance and supervision ensure only qualified persons service the
equipment.
The provision for locking or adding a lock to the disconnecting means must be on the switch or
circuit breaker, and it must remain in place whether the lock is installed or not.

Exception 2: An accessible attachment plug and receptacle can serve as the disconnecting means
for the equipment in 440.13, such as a household refrigerator, freezer, or beverage disperser. The
receptacle for the attachment plug doesn’t have to be readily accessible.

Fig. 2. An attachment plug and receptacle or cord connector can serve as the disconnecting
means for a room air conditioner.

An attachment plug and receptacle or cord connector can serve as the disconnecting means for a
room air conditioner [440. 13, 440.63] (Fig. 2). However, this is true only if the manual controls
on the room air conditioner are readily accessible and within 6 ft of the floor, or a readily
accessible disconnecting means (e.g., that cord connector) is within sight from the room air
conditioner. You can’t, for example, run the cord through a sheet of plywood and plug it in on
the other side.
A flexible cord that supplies a room air conditioner can’t be longer than:

• 10 ft for 120V units.

• 6 ft for 208V or 240V units [440.64].

You must provide single-phase, cord-and-plug-connected room air conditioners with a factory-
installed leakage current detector or with an AFCI [440.65].

Branch circuit overcurrent and ground fault protection

The branch circuit conductors, control equipment, and circuits supplying hermetic refrigerant
motor compressors must be protected against short circuits and ground faults. The requirements
for this are in 440.22, which supplements or amends the requirements of Art. 240.

Let’s look at single motor compressors. Notice where the hyphen is; the motor is actually built
into the compressor. For these, you initially size the short circuit and ground fault OCPD to no
more than 175% of the motor compressor current rating.

If you reached the 175% threshold but the OCPD can’t carry the starting current of the motor
compressor, you can use the next size larger OCPD. However, this OCPD can’t exceed 225%
of the motor compressor current rating.

What if you size it at 225%, and it still won’t carry the starting current? Then you have some
troubleshooting to do. Common causes include excessive voltage drop, refrigerant problems, and
controller problems. Investigate these, and you’ll probably find why that OCPD can’t handle the
starting current.

Let’s work a sample problem. What size 75°C conductor and protection do you need for a 24A
motor compressor connected to a 240V circuit? We solve this problem with this two-step
process:

Step 1: Determine the branch circuit conductor [Table 310.15(B)(16) and 440.32]:

24A × 1.25 = 30A, 10 AWG, rated 30A at 75°C [Table 310.15(B)(16)]

Step 2:   Determine the branch circuit protection [240.6(A) and 440.22(A)]:

24A × 1.75 = 42A, next size down = 40A

Suppose the 40A short circuit and ground fault OCPD can’t carry the starting current, so you
decide to size the OCPD up to 225% of the equipment load current rating. That works out as:
24A × 2.25 = 54A, next size down 50A.
If the equipment contains more than one hermetic refrigerant motor compressor, or a hermetic
refrigerant motor compressor and other loads, the equipment must have a visible nameplate
containing the maximum rating of the branch circuit short circuit and ground fault OCPD.

Multiple Aircon Circuit Feeder Conductor

Size the branch circuit conductors at 125% of the largest motor compressor current, plus the sum
of the rated-load currents of the other compressors [440.33]. This is identical to how you do it for
other types of motors [430.24] except Art. 440 wants you to use the largest motor compressor
current as your “largest motor.”

Sizing conductors

Branch circuit conductors to a single motor compressor must have an ampacity not less than
125% of the motor compressor rated-load current or the branch circuit selection current
— whichever is greater [440.32].

Sizing these is a straightforward table look-up of the amps after you multiply by 125%. Let’s
combine that with OCPD sizing in a sample problem.

Fig. 3. Turn to 440.32 for guidelines on how to size conductors for a motor compressor.

What size 75°C conductor and overcurrent device do you need for an 18A motor compressor
(Fig. 3)?

Solve it with this two-step process:

Step 1: Determine the branch circuit conductor [Table 310.15(B)(16) and 440.32]:

18A × 1.25 = 22.50A, 12 AWG, rated 25A at 75°C [Table 310.15(B)(16)]

Step 2:   Determine the branch-circuit protection [240.6(A) and 440.22(A)]:

18A × 1.75 = 31.50A, next size down = 30A

Suppose the 30A OCPD can’t carry the starting current, so, you decide to size the OCPD up to
225% of the equipment load current rating. That works out as:

18A × 2.25 = 40.50A, next size down 40A.

Note: You can use a 30A or 40A OCPD to protect a 12 AWG conductor for an air-conditioning
circuit. See 240.4(G).
Room air conditioners

Room air conditioners aren’t just for residential use. They are also used for commercial and
industrial applications like guard shacks, construction trailers, chemical storage sheds, and
industrial control panels.

The requirements of Art. 440 Part VII apply to a cord- and plug-connected room air conditioner
of the window or in-wall type that incorporates a hermetic refrigerant motor compressor rated
not over 40A, 250V, single-phase [440.60].

The branch circuit conductors for a cord and plug-connected room air conditioner must have an
ampacity not less than 125% of the rated-load current [440.32].

If the room air conditioner is the only load on a circuit, the marked rating of the air conditioner
can’t exceed 80% of the rating of the circuit OCPD [440.62(B)].

The total rating of a cord- and plug-connected room air conditioner must not exceed 50% of the
rating of a branch circuit where lighting outlets, other appliances, or general-use receptacles are
also supplied

Final tip

Not every motor used in a refrigeration system is a hermetic motor. For example, a large
refrigeration unit may have a motor-driven carousel, exhaust fan, and air-filtration blower. Now
you have three motors plus the hermetic one. Apply Art. 440 only to motors integrated into a
coolant compressor. 

Overcurrent Protection for Air-Conditioning and Refrigeration Equipment

Posted by Michael Johnston July 16, 2000 Electrical Inspections July/August 2000

Overcurrent protection for electrical equipment can be accomplished by several different


methods. The general rules for overcurrent protection of conductors and equipment are found in
Article 240 of the National Electric Code. Section 240-2 indicates Article 440 shall be used for
protection of air-conditioning and refrigerating equipment. In Part C of Article 440, specifically
Section 440-21, the Code states that the requirements of Part C of Article 440 are in addition to
or amend the basic requirements in Article 240. This means that the rules in Article 440 are
required to be used to obtain proper overcurrent protection for air-conditioning and refrigeration
equipment. The process used to size protective devices and circuit components is similar to the
process used with other types of motor-operated equipment. The proper application of
overcurrent protection rules for air-conditioning and refrigeration equipment can be made
relatively easy by following a few basic steps as outlined in this article. To better understand the
Code rules, the characteristics of these types of motors must be understood.

Photo 1. The overcurrent protection requirements differ slightly than those for standard electrical
motors

The Hermetic Refrigerant Motor-Compressor


Photo 2. The overcurrent protection requirements differ slightly than those for standard electrical
motors

Hermetic refrigerant motor-compressors differ from standard electric motors in a couple of


distinct areas. First, a hermetic refrigerant motor-compressor is different from a standard electric
motor because it has no external shaft. The motor itself operates in the refrigerant in a sealed
housing. Second, these hermetic refrigerant motor-compressors do not have a horsepower rating.
The hermetic refrigerant motor-compressor is rated instead by the rated-load current, which is
the average current the motor will draw under normally loaded conditions. Third, hermetic
refrigerant motor-compressors employ a unique method of cooling. The motor windings and
bearings are kept cool by the refrigerant. This characteristic shapes the overcurrent protection
requirements. A hermetic refrigerant motor-compressor can be worked much harder than a
standard motor. While the motor is operating, the compressor transforms the refrigerant into a
liquid, which cools both the motor and the refrigerated product or space. The cooling
characteristics depend on the type of refrigerant used, the flow rate of the liquid, and other
factors such as flow rate and density. Therefore, the manufacturer of the equipment determines
the characteristics of the overcurrent protection system. For this reason, the overcurrent
protection requirements differ slightly than those for standard electrical motors (see Photos 1, 2,
and 3).

Photo 3. The overcurrent protection requirements differ slightly than those for standard electrical
motors

The Two Types of Motors


The first task is to understand the difference between a standard motor and a hermetic motor-
compressor. Understanding the differences between the two types of motors enables us to apply
the proper Code rules. Section 440-3 requires installations of air conditioning equipment that
does not employ a hermetic refrigerant motor-compressor to follow the rules of Article 430, 422,
or 424 as applicable.

It is easy to make mistakes. Take, for example, the fan coil units of a walk-in dairy case.
Although the function of the fan-coil unit is to cool the walk-in cooler or freezer, the fan coil unit
only employs standard motors blowing cool air across a set of refrigeration coils (see Photos 4
and 5). The fan coil unit is required to comply with the requirements for motors in Article 430.
Unless the equipment employs a hermetic refrigerant motor-compressor, the Code requirements
of Article 440 are not applicable.

Photo 4. Although the function of the fan-coil unit is to cool the walk-in cooler or freezer, the fan
coil unit only employs standard motors blowing cool air across a set of refrigeration coils

The second task is to understand that the rules of Article 440 are in addition to, or amendatory of,
Article 430 and other articles of the Code. The rules for motor circuits in Article 430 are the
foundation of the special requirements for hermetic motor-compressors. Other applicable Code
rules apply in any situation where Article 440 does not modify or amend those rules.

The Nameplate of Combination-Load Equipment

Air-conditioning and refrigeration equipment that employs only a single hermetic refrigerant
motor-compressor shall comply with Parts C and D of Article 440. The equipment label or
nameplate will state the rated-load current, locked-rotor current, nominal voltage, phase,
frequency, and other data. The installer must provide overcurrent and overload protection per
Parts C and D.
Photo 5. Although the function of the fan-coil unit is to cool the walk-in cooler or freezer, the fan
coil unit only employs standard motors blowing cool air across a set of refrigeration coils

We will focus on the combination-load equipment. This type of equipment is more common than
a single motor unit. An example of combination-load equipment would be a typical air-
conditioning unit. One unit will contain several different loads in combination that comprise the
total electrical load of the equipment. This type of equipment will contain at least one hermetic
refrigerant motor-compressor. It may also contain a cooling fan or two and possibly a crankcase
heater for the compressor. Thus this type of equipment is considered as combination-load
equipment.

Figure 1. The two most useful numbers are the minimum circuit ampacity and the maximum
overcurrent protective device

There are several alternative methods to provide proper overcurrent protection for the equipment
covered by Article 440. The combination-load equipment manufactured today should have a
nameplate. The nameplate details the data needed in order to provide proper overcurrent
protection for the equipment. Section 440-4(b) requires that combination-load equipment be
provided with a nameplate that gives the installer and inspector valuable information. The
information on the nameplate includes the manufacturer’s name, voltage, phase, rated-load
amperes, etc., and two very important items. The two most useful numbers are the minimum
circuit ampacity and the maximum overcurrent protective device (see Figure 1).

Some equipment data plates indicate “Minimum Overcurrent Protective Device” ratings. The
rating indicates the minimum size fuse or circuit breaker needed to allow the motor to start
without nuisance tripping. If present, both minimum and maximum ratings must be followed in
selecting the proper protective device.

Figure 2. For combination-load equipment having a nameplate as required by Section 440-4(b),


the branch-circuit conductors are required to be “not less than the minimum circuit ampacity
marked on the” nameplate of the equipment

The Branch Circuit Requirements

The branch-circuit conductor size requirements for hermetic refrigerant motor-compressors are
located in Part D of Article 440. The sizing requirements for the branch-circuit conductors are
very similar to those requirements for standard motors. Basically, the branch-circuit conductors
are required to be sized at 125 percent of the rated-load current of the single hermetic motor-
compressor or 125 percent of the branch-circuit selection current, whichever is less. However,
for combination-load equipment having a nameplate as required by Section 440-4(b), the branch-
circuit conductors are required to be “not less than the minimum circuit ampacity marked on the”
nameplate of the equipment (see Figure 2). See NEC Section 440-35.

The manufacturer has already calculated the conductor size to be based on the total of all of the
motor loads in the combination-load equipment times 125 percent. It is not necessary to do these
calculations again. For this type of equipment, the installer and the inspector only have to install
and verify that the branch-circuit conductors supplying the equipment have an ampacity equal to
or greater than the minimum circuit ampacity marked on the nameplate of the equipment.

The Branch-Circuit Short-Circuit Ground-Fault Protection

The nameplate data is also used to select the proper size or rating of the branch-circuit short-
circuit and ground-fault protective device. The manufacturer may limit the choice of devices.
Fuses and/or HACR rated circuit breakers are normally used for this type of protection.

The branch-circuit short-circuit ground-fault protective device for hermetic refrigerant motor-
compressors is required to not exceed 175 percent of the motor-compressor rated-load current.
The rating or setting of the protective device may be increased if the initial setting is insufficient
for the starting current. The maximum rating or setting is limited to 225 percent of the rated-load
current of the motor-compressor or the branch-circuit selection current, whichever is greater. See
Section 440-22(a) of the Code.
A hermetic motor-compressor draws locked-rotor current at startup. The branch-circuit short-
circuit ground-fault protective device is permitted to be increased by these percentages to allow
the motor-compressor to start without tripping the overcurrent device. However, for
combination-load equipment, the Code requires that the nameplate be marked to indicate the
maximum rating of the overcurrent protective device. The manufacturer has again already done
the calculation for the installer or inspector. No additional calculations are necessary in the field
to size the overcurrent protective device.

Figure 3. Be sure to use a HACR rated circuit breaker if so indicated on the nameplate

Sometimes the manufacturer of the combination-load equipment will specify fuses as the
overcurrent protective device. This is important information and must be followed. If the
nameplate says fuse only, the equipment has been evaluated and tested only with a fuse. The
manufacturer has determined that only a fuse provides the proper overcurrent protection for the
hermetic refrigerant motor-compressor and the other internal components. Use of a circuit
breaker would be in violation of the Code Section 440-4(b) and 440-22(c). This would also be in
violation of Section 110-3(b). This is the equivalent of not following the manufacturer’s
instructions provided with the equipment. Not following the instructions is the same as not
following the Code.

Most manufacturers permit either fuses or HACR circuit breakers as the protective device. If the
equipment is marked “maximum fuse size*” and the * at the bottom of the nameplate indicates
“or HACR circuit breaker” then the equipment has been evaluated and tested for use with either
form of overcurrent protection. A HACR breaker is a type of circuit breaker that is listed for
group applications. In other words, the breaker is able to supply proper protection for both the
larger compressor motor circuit as well as the components of the smaller fan motor circuit. Be
sure to use a HACR rated circuit breaker if so indicated on the nameplate (see Figure 3).
The “maximum overcurrent protective device” rating is the other very important number on the
data plate. The overcurrent protection device marked on combination-load equipment is marked
“maximum” such as “maximum fuse size.” This means that specified size cannot be exceeded.
The device could be less than that maximum size.

Figure 4. Values on a typical air-conditioning unit nameplate

It may seem that the conductors are improperly protected. However it is the combination of the
maximum size short-circuit and ground-fault protective device together with the overload
protection system of the equipment that is providing the overcurrent protection for all circuit
components. If the overload protection is field-installed for a hermetic refrigerant motor-
compressor, the overload sizing must be in accordance with Section 440-52 and must not exceed
the manufacturer’s values.

In Figure 2, the nameplate indicates the minimum circuit ampacity and the maximum overcurrent
device. Based on the nameplate data the conductors are required to be capable of carrying 27.8
amperes. Remember, with combination-load equipment the 125 percent factor is already used by
the manufacturer to determine the 27.8-ampere total. A No. 10 THWN copper conductor is an
acceptable size for the circuit conductors. The maximum overcurrent protective device marked
on the equipment is 40 amperes. It appears as though the No. 10 THWN conductors are
improperly protected. This is not true. The 40-ampere fuse or HACR circuit breaker provides the
short-circuit and ground-fault protection. The overload protective device limits the normal
running current to the proscribed values.

The overcurrent protective device could be a device rated smaller than 40 amperes as long as it
can handle the starting and running current of the equipment. These maximum values are often
misunderstood to be the only size allowable by the Code, when in fact it is the value that must
not be exceeded.

Equipment Requiring Two Supply Voltages


Figure 5. Consequently, since the equivalent full-load current of this A/C unit is 19.3 amperes,
the next higher rating must be used, and the disconnect switch must have a minimum of a 5-
horsepower, 230-volt, single-phase rating

Air-conditioning and refrigeration equipment that requires two supply circuits at different
voltages is required to be marked with a nameplate indicating the minimum circuit ampacity and
maximum overcurrent protective devices required for each of the circuits supplying the
equipment. This can appear on the same nameplate but it is more common to see individual
nameplates. It is not uncommon to see a refrigeration compressor rack in a grocery store that
requires the two circuits [see Section 440-4(b)].

Disconnecting Means Rating

The rules in 440-12 determine the minimum rating and interrupting capacity of the disconnecting
means. Where the air-conditioning or heat pump compressor unit consists of a hermetic
refrigerant motor-compressor(s) in combination with other loads, such as the fan motor, the
horsepower rating of the disconnecting means is based on the summation of all currents at both
rated-load condition and also at locked-rotor condition. For example, using the values on a
typical air-conditioning unit nameplate, (see Figure 4) the 18-ampere rated-load current (RLA)
of the compressor motor is added to the 1.3 ampere full-load current (FLA) of the fan motor.

The total of 19.3 amperes is then considered to be the equivalent full-load current for the
combined load. According to NEC Table 430-148, the full-load current rating of a 230-volt,
single-phase, 3-horsepower motor is 17 amperes, while the full-load current rating of a 230-volt,
single-phase, 5-horsepower motor is 28 amperes. Consequently, since the equivalent full-load
current of this A/C unit is 19.3 amperes, the next higher rating must be used, and the disconnect
switch must have a minimum of a 5-horsepower, 230-volt, single-phase rating (see Figure 5).
Figure 6. Section 440-14 requires a disconnecting means for air-conditioning and refrigeration
equipment to be located within sight from the equipment it supplies

The ampere rating of the disconnecting means must also be at least 115 percent of the sum of all
currents at rated-load condition. This minimum rating would then be 115 percent x 19.3 amperes
= 22.19 amperes. If the disconnecting means includes or serves as the branch-circuit overcurrent
protection for the unit, the rating required for the overcurrent device, rather than this minimum
rating, would generally be the determining factor in sizing the disconnecting means. A fused
disconnect switch containing either the maximum or minimum sizes of fuses listed on the
nameplate would exceed this 115 percent minimum requirement. If an unfused disconnect switch
is used as the disconnecting means, however, then this 115 percent rating and the horsepower
rating would establish the minimum switch rating.

There is one other consideration in establishing the correct size of the disconnecting means
serving the air-conditioning unit. The disconnecting means rating must also be based on currents
at locked-rotor condition. Refer to NEC Table 430-151(A) for the conversion of locked-rotor
current (LRA) to horsepower. In our example, the nameplate indicates that the motor-compressor
LRA is 96 amperes. Since the nameplate does not give a LRA for the fan motor, we assume it to
be six times the FLA or 6 x 1.3 amperes = 7.8 amperes. Adding this to the motor-compressor
LRA of 96 amperes gives us an equivalent LRA for the combined load of 103.8 amperes. Again
referring to NEC Table 430-151, we find that for a single-phase, 230-volt motor with a 103.8
amperes motor locked-rotor current, the disconnect switch should be based on a 5-horsepower
rating. See NEC Section 440-12.
Photo 6. The disconnecting means may be located on or within the air-conditioning or
refrigerating equipment.

Trying to use the nameplate ratings to size the disconnecting means can be confusing. For
example, consider the nameplate information “minimum circuit amperes = 26″ and “maximum
overcurrent protective device = 35.” Is a 30-ampere disconnect suitable for use with this
particular unit? This is why the locked-rotor ampere marking is important. Since there is no
horsepower rating on the hermetic refrigerant motor-compressors, the locked-rotor equivalent
must be obtained by using the values in Table 430-151(A) or (B), as appropriate. Using the rated
total load amperes of the equipment, we can determine if the disconnecting means has a
sufficiently large horsepower rating. Disconnect switches having the same ampere rating may
have different horsepower ratings. Installers and inspectors should carefully observe the
markings on both the equipment and the disconnecting means. The rating of the disconnecting
means is especially critical for larger equipment. Disconnecting means for equipment with an
equivalent horsepower rating in excess of 100 horsepower are required to comply with Section
430-109. If general duty switches are used as disconnecting means for equipment exceeding 100
horsepower, the disconnecting means is required to be marked “Do Not Operate Under Load.”
The installer normally applies this additional marking.
Photo 7. The disconnecting means may be located on or within the air-conditioning or
refrigerating equipment.

Location of the Disconnecting Means

Section 440-14 requires a disconnecting means for air-conditioning and refrigeration equipment
to be located within sight from the equipment it supplies (see Figure 6). The disconnecting
means may be located on or within the air-conditioning or refrigerating equipment. See Photos 6
and 7.

There are two exceptions to this general requirement. One exception allows a cord and plug to be
utilized as the disconnecting means for portable or window-type air-conditioning equipment, and
the other exception allows air-conditioning equipment in a large industrial process line to have a
means out of sight but capable of being locked in the open position (see Photo 8).

Photo 8.

Summary
UL 1995 – Heating and Cooling Equipment. (This standard covers central heating, central air-
conditioning, and heat pumps.) UL 484 – Room Air Conditioners. These product safety
standards detail the necessary safety tests and determine the required nameplate markings and
instructions that are included by the manufacturer of the equipment. For example, paragraph
36.3(i) of UL 1995 specifies the equipment shall be marked with a “maximum overcurrent
protective device size.” A typical nameplate will show the “MAXIMUM FUSE” and/or
“MAXIMUM CIRCUIT BREAKER” size. If the nameplate specifies only fuses, then the unit is
intended to be protected by fuses only. If the nameplate requires HACR (Heating, Air-
Conditioning and Refrigeration) circuit breakers, then the circuit breaker protecting the unit must
be marked “HACR.”

If the nameplate includes both fuses and HACR circuit breakers, as is the case of our nameplate
example, then either is acceptable.

The selection process for hermetic motor-compressor circuit components is somewhat different
from that of other motors. Using the markings on the end-use equipment helps ensure proper
protection.

You might also like