The starting current of motor can become 3 to 6 times the normal 
running current! That's normal for motors. The motor can 
experience this high current for a period ranging from 20 to 50 
seconds.
A fuse will not be very useful in protecting a motor from this 
type of overload condition. A selected fuse large enough to 
permit passage of the necessary starting current would give 
little or no protection against overheating of the windings under 
normal running load conditions. The same case happens for the 
circuit breaker.
Overload relays offer protection of motors that is both 
compatible with the starting current of the circuit, and the 
requirement of protection in the event of overload running 
condition.
These conditions need to be adjustable. A particular motor 
requiring 56 seconds starting time under normal load will suffer 
serious damage if the rotor locks and the motor is not tripped in 
20 seconds. Another motor may be able to withstand 25 percent 
overload for 30 minutes. A hermetically sealed compressor motor 
may burn in 3 minutes at 25 percent overload!
Good protection against overheating of the motor windings can be 
obtained from temperature monitoring protector devices that are 
embedded into the motor windings. These do not protect the motor 
itself, but act as sensors to trigger a temperature control 
circuit to stop the motor.
A thermal overload relay, however, uses a heating element to heat 
up a bimetallic strip so that it can trip a latch that will open 
the motor control circuit. This action will disconnect the motor 
from the line.
For reliable operation, the overload relay must be located at the 
same temperature environment as the motor. The heating effect of 
the bimetallic strip mechanism is supposed to represent the 
heating of the motor windings.
Melting alloy overload relays calibrated by the manufacturer are 
considered the most reliable of all the thermal overload 
protective devices. However, more commonly used is the bimetallic 
overload relays because the tripping current setting can be 
adjusted.
All the overload relays have one major limitation - because they 
operate on line current, they do not directly sense the motor 
temperatures. For normal steady running conditions, this poses 
no problem at all.
However, when a motor starts and stops frequently, the relay may 
not completely protect the motor. Why is that so?
During the motor running, the relay temperature follows the motor 
temperature closely. When the motor is off, the relay tends to 
cool off at a faster rate because of its lower mass. After a 
number of starts and stops, the temperatures of the relay and the 
motor may drift further and further apart. Eventually the motor 
becomes hot, and yet the relay does not trip because it is still 
cool. The motor burns.
Frequent starting and stopping of motors is no good both 
electrically and mechanically.
Until next time...
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