3-Phase Motor Amperage Calculator

Calculate 3-phase motor full-load amps from HP, voltage, efficiency, and power factor. NEC Table 430.250 lookup and breaker sizing.

About the 3-Phase Motor Amperage Calculator

Three-phase motors are the workhorses of commercial and industrial facilities. Knowing the full-load amperage (FLA) is essential for selecting the correct wire size, breaker, overload relay, and variable frequency drive. The FLA depends on the motor horsepower, supply voltage, efficiency, and power factor.

The National Electrical Code (NEC) provides standard FLA tables (Table 430.250 for 3-phase motors) that are used for sizing branch circuit conductors, short-circuit protection, and overload devices. However, actual motor current may differ from the NEC table values based on the specific motor efficiency and power factor.

This calculator offers both methods: a direct calculation using the motor formula and a lookup from NEC Table 430.250. It also sizes the branch circuit breaker at 125% of FLA per NEC 430.52, computes apparent and reactive power, and displays the full NEC reference table for quick cross-referencing. Check the example with realistic values before reporting. It is most useful when you need to compare nameplate-style engineering current with the code table values used for conductor and protection sizing.

Why Use This 3-Phase Motor Amperage Calculator?

Incorrectly sized motor circuits cause nuisance breaker trips (undersized) or inadequate protection against overloads (oversized). The FLA calculation involves multiple nameplate values and the √3 factor for three-phase circuits, which is easy to get wrong manually.

This calculator provides both the engineering calculation and the NEC code-based approach side by side, sizes the breaker to the next standard size, and displays the full NEC FLA table for reference. Electricians, engineers, and maintenance personnel use it daily for motor circuit design and troubleshooting.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the motor horsepower rating from the nameplate.
  2. Select the supply voltage (208V, 230V, 460V, 480V, or 575V).
  3. Enter the motor efficiency percentage from the nameplate.
  4. Enter the power factor (typically 0.80-0.90 for induction motors).
  5. Adjust the service factor if applicable (usually 1.0 or 1.15).
  6. Choose between calculated FLA or NEC table lookup for sizing.
  7. Review FLA, breaker size, and power triangle analysis.

Formula

FLA = (HP × 746) / (√3 × V × η × PF), where HP = horsepower, V = line-to-line voltage, η = efficiency (decimal), PF = power factor. Breaker = FLA × 1.25, rounded up to the next standard size.

Example Calculation

Result: 13.3 A calculated, 14 A NEC

A 10 HP motor at 480V with 89.5% efficiency and 0.85 PF draws about 13.3A. The NEC table lists 14A for a 10 HP motor at 460V. A 20A breaker (125% × 14 = 17.5A → next standard) is appropriate.

Tips & Best Practices

Understanding 3-Phase Motor Full-Load Amperage

Three-phase power delivers energy using three alternating currents offset by 120°. This creates a rotating magnetic field that drives induction motors efficiently. The relationship between mechanical output (HP) and electrical input (amps) depends on the motor efficiency, power factor, and supply voltage.

The formula FLA = (HP × 746) / (√3 × V × η × PF) derives from the basic power equation P = √3 × V × I × PF, solved for current. The 746 factor converts horsepower to watts, and √3 (approximately 1.732) accounts for the three-phase geometry.

NEC Motor Circuit Protection

The NEC has specific rules for motor circuits that differ from standard branch circuits. Wire must be sized at 125% of FLA (NEC 430.22). Short-circuit protection (breakers or fuses) can be much larger than the conductor ampacity — up to 250% for inverse-time breakers and 300% for fuses (NEC 430.52). This accommodates motor starting inrush current, which can be 5-8 times the running FLA.

Overload protection is separate from short-circuit protection and is set at 115% of nameplate FLA for a 1.15 service factor motor, or 125% for a 1.0 SF motor (NEC 430.32). This distinction between overload and short-circuit protection is unique to motor circuits and is critical for proper design.

Practical Considerations

In the field, measure actual running current with a clamp meter and compare to nameplate FLA. Current significantly above FLA may indicate mechanical overload, low voltage, phase imbalance, or bearing failure. Current well below FLA suggests the motor is oversized for the application, which wastes energy and reduces power factor. Variable frequency drives (VFDs) can improve both energy efficiency and power factor for variable-load applications.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I convert HP to amps for a 3-phase motor?

Use FLA = (HP × 746) / (√3 × V × eff × PF). For a quick estimate with typical efficiency and PF, divide HP by voltage and multiply by about 1500.

Why is NEC FLA different from the calculated value?

NEC table values are based on average motors and are used specifically for conductor and protection sizing. Actual current depends on the specific motor efficiency and power factor, which can vary.

What breaker size for a 10 HP 3-phase motor?

At 480V, the NEC FLA is 14A. Using an inverse-time breaker at 250% gives 35A → use a 35A breaker. For wire sizing, use 125% = 17.5A → 12 AWG minimum.

Does voltage affect motor amperage?

Yes — for the same HP, lower voltage means higher current. A 10 HP motor draws about 14A at 460V but about 28A at 230V.

What is the service factor?

The service factor (SF) is a multiplier indicating how much the motor can be overloaded continuously. An SF of 1.15 means the motor can safely run at 115% of rated HP.

How does power factor affect motor sizing?

Lower power factor means higher current for the same real power output. A motor with PF 0.75 draws more amps than one with PF 0.90 at the same HP, requiring larger conductors and protection.

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