Motor Starting
Motor Starting
FLC (A) = (Motor Power (kW) × 1000) / (√3 × Voltage × Efficiency × Power Factor)
Example:
Motor Power = 75 kW
Voltage = 400 V
Efficiency = 0.9
Power Factor = 0.85
Example:
Tapping = 65%
Starting current becomes (0.65)^2 = 0.4225 = 42.25% of direct-on-line starting current
This is the line current; the motor still sees 6 × FLC at its terminals, but the supply sees much
less.
You must select an auto transformer with a short-duty rating (typically 30 seconds, 60 seconds,
or 1 minute) equal to or greater than 248 kVA.
Note: You can oversize slightly to accommodate duty cycle or ambient conditions.
Use 65% as a balanced choice unless you know the load requires more torque at start.
Motor Power: 75 kW
Voltage: 400 V
FLC: approx. 141 A
Starting Tapping: 65%
Starting Current (line): 358 A
Starting kVA: 248 kVA
Auto Transformer Rating: ≥250 kVA for 30-60 seconds
Main Contactor: 150 A (AC3)
Star Contactor: 100 A (AC3)
Auto Transformer Contactor: 400 A (AC3)
Overload Relay: 140-160 A range
Cables: Rated for 150 A continuous
If both an Auto Transformer Starter and Star-Delta Starter are being considered (or
combined in some way), it's important to understand their differences, application contexts, and
why or when they might be used together.
However, Auto Transformer Starting and Star-Delta Starting are generally not combined
in practice — because they are two different reduced-voltage starting methods with different
wiring, timing, and performance characteristics.
But if you're asking from an analysis or comparison perspective (or designing for a scenario
where both methods are considered as options for the same motor), then here's how to handle
Auto Transformer Starter vs. Star-Delta Starter — including their sizing parameters,
selection criteria, and how you might document both in your Word report.
Star-Delta Starter:
Reduces starting current by connecting motor windings in Star (Y) first, then Delta (Δ)
Reduces starting voltage to 58% of line voltage
Simple and economical for motors >10 HP (~7.5 kW) with light starting load
Fixed torque reduction, cannot adjust
Options Evaluated:
Summary Table:
Recommendation:
For high-torque or high-inertia loads (e.g., compressors, conveyors), Auto Transformer Starter
with 65% tapping is recommended. For simple, low-cost installations with low starting load,
Star-Delta may be considered for motors below 50–75 kW.