Yes i believe it does. The amunt of load determines the Q-point of the amp, and thus the flow of currrent , which in turn heates up the amp consderably. Also in some feed-back amps, it changes the amplfication levl ,but i am sure, these problems are accounted for in epensive amps .
Full load amps is the maximum rated amps that the motor should draw according to its nameplate rating. Running load amps is the actual amperage the motor is drawing at that point in time when the test is taken. Some motor loads vary depending on if the load is cyclic. The reading on this type of motor would be from no load amps to full load amps.
No good idea. The CT may not function well at a load beyond 630 amps. It may even fail at higher load (than 630 amps)
That load would be 10.9 amps.
The maximum current rating for the circuit breaker that can handle a load of 40 amps is 40 amps.
what is the full load amps for 2.4 hp motor at 460 volts ?
3 AA batteries provide about 4.5 volts. The amps depend on the load but for D-cells a load of 10 amps can be sustained for short periods.
I have a single phase induction motor. It draws 8 amps on start up and climbs to 14-15 amps when I put a load on it. When I don't have a load it runs at 1 and climbs to 2-3 amps. It is normal operation for this motor to run at the lower number of amps with a load. But I don't know what is wrong.
For a 41 amp load, you would typically use a 50 amp circuit breaker. The general rule is to select a breaker size that is 125% of the continuous load amps or equal to the load amps if it is not a continuous load. In this case, 41 amps is considered a continuous load, so you would round up to the nearest available breaker size, which is 50 amps.
There are zero amps in 3000 volts. A load needs to be connected to the voltage.
rla run load amps lra locked rotor amps.
Slightly more than 11 amps. <<>> I = W/E I = 2500000/220 = 11364 amps
FLA is the nameplate amperage rating of the motor when it is running at its designed horsepower and on the motors designed voltage. 746 watts = 1 HP. The FLA of a 1 HP motor at 240 volts would be W = amps x volts, Amps = Watts/Voltage. 746/240 = 3.1 amps full load. Overload the motor and the amps go higher, motor running at no load amps are lower than FLA