Specification of A.C. Motors to work in Classified areas

Helpfull tips to considered at the time of making and A.C. Motor purchase order.

Lightining Protection System Design

Guide to design and establish the efective protection zone agains lightings.

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Our main purpose is presenting information about the latest technology improvements in the fields of electronics and electrical engineering as well as the influence of other science fields that might get involved.

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Thursday, December 17, 2015

Basics Of Motor Starters And Contactors - Repost

Welcome to this EATON’s guide, which is about starters, devices that control the use of electrical power to equipment, usually a motor. As the name implies, starters “start” motors. They can also stop them, reverse them, accelerate them, and protect them.
Starters are made from two building blocks, contactors and overload protection:
  • Contactors control the electric current to the motor. Their function is to repeatedly establish and interrupt an electrical power circuit.
  • Overload Protection protects motors from drawing too much current and overheating, from literally “burning out.


The Contactors

A contactor can stand on its own as a power control device, or as part of a starter. Contactors are used in applications ranging from the light switch to the most complex, automated industrial equipment.
Contactors are used by electrical equipment that isfrequently turned off and on (opening and closing the circuit), such as lights, heaters, and motors.
Whatever the application, the function of the contactor is always the same: to make and break all power supply lines running to a load. Or, as defined by NEMA, to repeatedly establish and interrupt an electrical power circuit.
We’ll start by talking about the building blocks of a starter: the contactor and overload protection. We will then conclude with a discussion on starters.
Here are the topics that we will cover:
  1. The Contactor (magnetic contactor, how the contactor operates, contact life etc.)
  2. Overload Protection (How motors work, what is an overload?, overload relay, tripping etc.)
  3. The Starter (magnetic motor starter, starter circuitry, types, standards and ratings etc.)
  4. Helping the Customer (NEMA or IEC?, checking the motor nameplate etc.)
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