How to Save Money When Buying low voltage motors supplier

31 Mar.,2025

 

Save Money Using High-Efficiency Motors - POWER Magazine

As a group, electric motors represent one of the best opportunities to save energy and reduce operating costs in a power plant. The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) estimates that American industry could reduce by 11% to 18% the amount of electricity its countless motors require by switching to more-efficient models. The total energy and cost savings would be huge, as industrial motors are the largest end users of electricity in the U.S. Approximately 69% of the electricity consumed by industry (Figure 1) is used to power motors, 90% of which are AC induction motors.

1. U.S. industrial energy use. Source: U.S. DOE

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Electricity accounts for more than 97% of the lifetime cost of a motor. As a result, choosing a premium-efficiency AC motor, either to replace a failed motor or for a new application, is a smart move and a wise investment. Beware of vendors that describe their motors as “high-efficiency,” because the term is meaningless. The term “premium-efficiency” is now used to describe a motor that uses less electricity than most others on the market. Premium-efficiency motors are 2% to 8% more efficient than standard motors, for the following reasons:

  • Their windings use up to 60% more copper, which reduces resistance losses. The increased thermal mass provided by the copper reduces operating temperatures as well.
  • Their designs reduce windage and other losses.
  • They use more and thinner laminations of high-quality steel, reducing core losses from the stator and rotor.
  • Their narrower air gaps between the stator and rotor increases magnetic flux to the point at which the same torque is available at reduced power output.
  • Their rotor bar designs improve starting torque yet maintain efficiency at full-speed operation.

Naturally, premium-efficiency AC motors cost more than standard motors (see below). But the cost differential can often be recovered in as little as one year, depending on the motor’s duty cycle and local electric rates. The reduction in consumption then continues year after year. Since motors usually last 15 to 20 years, over a premium-efficiency motor’s lifetime the savings can be substantial.

AC Induction Rules

As mentioned previously, AC induction motors dominate the motor market. They are simple in design, inexpensive, and reliable, and their replacement parts are widely available. AC induction motors are available in single-phase or three-phase configurations and in sizes ranging from fractions of a horsepower to tens of thousands of horsepower. Some run at fixed speeds—typically 900 rpm, 1,200 rpm, 1,800 rpm, or 3,600 rpm. Others, with variable-frequency drives, operate at a wide range of speeds.

AC induction motors also are available in a range of efficiencies in each motor size class (Figure 2). The higher the horsepower, the higher the efficiency; most motors over 25 hp are more than 90% efficient. The Virginia-based National Electronic Manufacturers Association (NEMA) and the Canadian Standards Association (CSA) agree on what constitutes an “energy-efficient” motor—any model whose horsepower and efficiency ratings put it above the red line in Figure 2. The Boston-based, nonprofit Consortium for Energy Efficiency Inc. (CEE) defines the term a bit more stringently. Its standards (the blue line) are higher than those of NEMA/CSA.

2. The Consortium for Energy Efficiency defines an “energy-efficient” motor differently and more stringently than the National Electrical Manufacturers Association or the Canadian Standards Association. Models above both the red and blue lines exceed all three groups’ definitions of “energy efficiency.” Source: Platts/E Source

One way that the CEE promotes energy efficiency is a program in which utilities can participate by offering rebates to their commercial and industrial customers for replacing equipment (such as motors and lighting) with more-efficient models. Such equipment is now being developed and sold by more vendors. For example, Baldor Electric Co. has improved the efficiency of more than 125 models in its line of Super-E AC motors rated from 1 to 500 hp to as high as 96%. All meet or exceed the efficiency required to qualify a buyer for a rebate under the CEE program.

Legislating Efficiency

State governments and the federal government also are promoting energy efficiency. One goal of the Energy Policy Act (EPAct) of was to reduce the amount of electricity consumed by various industrial and consumer products, including motors. EPAct required manufacturers to stop selling motors with rated load efficiencies below a specified minimum. What’s more, it gave the DOE the authority to prescribe energy efficiency standards, testing procedures, and labeling requirements.

Although many of EPAct’s provisions went into effect in the early and mid-s, motor manufacturers were given until October to comply with sections that mandated progressively higher efficiencies for higher horsepower. All general-purpose, three-phase induction motors between 1 and 200 hp were affected.

Before the act was passed, manufacturers had the option of making a less-expensive, less-efficient motor. Since that option was taken away from them, the price of premium-efficiency motors has fallen. They are no longer 20% more costly than standard motors because more premium-efficiency motors are being sold.

On Dec. 19, , President Bush signed the Energy Independence and Security Act of (EISA) into law. A part of EISA was the inclusion of new motor efficiency standards, supported by the National Electrical Manufacturers Association. More information on motor efficiency standards is available from NEMA.

DOE Lends a Hand

As a federal agency, the Department of Energy is doing its part to support Washington’s push to get U.S. industry to reduce its electricity consumption. To help convince users that buying energy-efficient AC motors makes economic sense, the DOE offers—free of charge—a software program called MotorMaster that calculates the potential savings from doing so. Powered by a database of specs and prices of 20,000 energy-efficient motors, MotorMaster is capable of doing very thorough economic analysis. Even better, it can serve as a motor management database for power plant managers who want to keep track of things like the maintenance records of all the motors in their fleet. The software can be downloaded from the MotorMaster page of the DOE’s Office of Industrial Technologies website.

Designed for use by facilities managers and technicians, MotorMaster analyzes motor system efficiency. Users can identify inefficient or oversized motors and compute the energy and demand savings that would result from replacing them with energy-efficient or premium-efficiency models. The software also can do energy conservation and lifecycle analyses and energy consumption accounting, and its hierarchical structure facilitates examination of a fleet’s energy efficiency on a plant-by-plant basis.

To put MotorMaster to the test, we asked it to compare the prices and operating costs of standard AC motors and premium-efficiency AC motors rated at 200 hp. The software quickly made two things clear:

  • A 200-hp premium-efficiency AC motor costs, on average, less than $1,000 more than a standard motor of identical rating (Figure 3).
  • At a 100% duty cycle, the difference in efficiency between a standard and premium-efficiency AC motor is only about 1% (Figure 4).


3. Even at high horsepower, the cost differential between a premium-efficiency and a standard-efficiency motor is less than 10% (less than $1,000). Source: Platts/E Source


4. According to the DOE’s MotorMaster software, at either a 100% or 75% duty cycle a premium-efficiency motor is only about 1% more efficient than a standard motor. Source: Platts/E Source

However, MotorMaster also revealed that the drop in electricity consumption (and electricity cost) that would result from going with a premium-efficiency motor is significant. By replacing a standard, 200-hp motor that works at a 100% duty cycle with a premium-efficiency model, a plant could expect to see a reduction in its annual electric bill of $15,000 (Figure 5). Since a motor of that size costs only about $14,000, it could pay for itself in less than one year. According to MotorMaster, motors that run all the time—the norm in baseload power plants—have an average payback time of less than two years (Figure 6).

5. Annual energy savings from a premium-efficiency motor. Source: Platts/E Source

6. In most cases, premium-efficiency AC motors pay for themselves in less than two years. Source: Platts/E Source

With competitive price and timely delivery, CHANGLI ELECTRIC MOTOR sincerely hope to be your supplier and partner.

MotorMaster’s ability to compare prices, efficiencies, payback periods, and other important data should appeal to any power plant or facilities manager responsible for keeping a fleet of motors humming. Likewise, the software’s number-crunching prowess should appeal to technicians who do efficiency calculations on a regular basis. Of course, one can always compute efficiency and savings the old-fashioned way, as follows.

If a motor operates at constant speed on a regular basis, calculating the savings that upgrading to a more-efficient model would yield is a straightforward exercise. Just replace the variables on the right side of this equation with your values:

S = 0.746 x C x LF x N x [(100 / ES) – (100 / EH)] x PAVG

Where:
S = annual cost savings
0.746 = conversion from horsepower to kilowatts
C = nameplate horsepower of the motor
LF = load factor for application (% of full load)
N = number of operating hours per year
ES = efficiency of existing motor
EH = efficiency of proposed motor
PAVG = average cost per kilowatt-hour for electricity

Taking the Plunge

Repairing old motors is not necessarily cost-effective. But replacing them requires more than just writing a big check. To minimize the lifecycle costs of a motor system, plant managers should do the following.

Consider a Whole-System Design. The full potential of purchasing a premium-efficiency AC motor can best be captured if it is integrated into an optimized drive power system. Although this may be difficult to do in retrofit applications, it is important when designing new systems where all components can be sized correctly from the get-go. Optimized motor systems often use less than half the energy of systems designed with standard rules of thumb. Selecting efficient, properly sized models of the equipment the AC motor will drive (pumps and fans, for example) also improves the overall efficiency of the drive power system. Selecting the right controls for motors and the equipment they drive, and then making sure that their belts are aligned and correctly tensioned once they are put into service are two other ways to maximize the efficiency of a drive power system.

Purchase the Right Size Motor. Motors are most efficient between about 60% and 100% of their full-rated load, and are very inefficient below 50% loading (Figure 7). As a result, simply buying the right size motor can increase efficiency significantly. Interestingly, about one-third of the motors in the field are so oversized that they operate below 50% of their rated load most of the time. Oversized motors not only operate inefficiently, but they are also more expensive than the correct size motor, and they can contribute to reduced power factor, which increases the load on the electrical system.

7. For both classes of motor, efficiency remains fairly constant between 50% and 100% of rated load. But it is much lower below 50%. Source: Platts/E Source

Consider Switching to Adjustable-Speed Drives. Adjustable-speed drives (ASDs) internally vary the voltage and frequency of the alternating current driving their motors. By enabling dynamic matching of motor speed to varying load requirements, ASDs can substantially reduce a motor system’s energy consumption. ASDs can also improve a system’s power factor (PF) and provide other benefits such as soft-starting and overspeed capability.

How to Save Motor Energy - SM Service & Technology

A RIDDLE... What costs $36,000?
  • A new car? Probably
  • Your real estate taxes? I hope not
  • Energy to power one 50 HP motor for one year? Correct!
Interested in saving 5-10% or more?

As an Allied Partner for the U.S. Department of Energy's Motor Challenge Program, we are committed to helping industrial motor users increase profits by saving motor energy.

For a free energy analysis on a motor, Click Here -

Ways to Save Motor Energy

There are 4 basic methods of reducing motor energy:
    1. Turn off the motor!  (not always a viable alternative, but the best). Double check operating schedules and motor down-time. It’s a fact that many motors operate at idle for long periods of time and simply waste energy.
    1. Don’t wait for a breakdown. Replace the motor now with a Premium Efficiency equal. When you combine the energy savings with our low prices, it can provide a cost payback of less than 2 years. Adding a rebatefrom your utility reduces that and could easily produce an immediate and continuous positive cash flow.  That’s more money on your bottom line, now!
      See our other website:
      bigelectricmotors.com
  1. Motors that can be effectively speed reduced can be fitted with a VFD (Variable Frequency Drive) which will allow the user to adjust the motor’s speed to match its work load. Energy savings can be reduced dramatically.
    For example, the speed of a centrifugal fan reduced by only 1/3 will save over 70% in energy!

To order or get a quote on an ENERGY EFFICIENT MOTOR visit our other website – bigelectricmotors.com

For Free Literature on Motor Energy Conservation Click On Below Links –

 1. REPLACE or REWIND ?The Impact of Rewinding on Motor Efficiency   by GE Motors, Fort Wayne, In., 6 pgs.
When a motor fails, the user faces three choices: to rewind to the same efficiency, to rewind to a higher efficiency or to replace it with a new motor of premium efficiency design.  This paper covers the advantages and disadvantages of each approach and the precautions that must be taken to avoid increasing motor losses if rewinding is chosen.

2. Buying an Energy-Efficient Electric Motor
by Bonneville Power Administration, 8 pgs.
This technology update shows you how to obtain the most efficient motor at the lowest price and avoid common problems.  The publication answers ten common questions including: What efficiency values should I use when comparing motors? When is an energy-efficient motor cost effective? How can I obtain motor prices and efficiency values?

3. Optimizing Your Motor Driven System
by Bonneville Power Administration, 5 pgs.
By optimizing the efficiency of your drive systems, you can increase productivity while saving significant amounts of energy and money. This technology update presents an overview of electric drive systems and highlights common ways you can improve system efficiency and reliability. Power quality, motor and transmissions efficiency, and monitoring and maintenance are discussed.

4. Determining Electric Motor Load & Efficiencyby Bonneville Power Administration, 5 pgs.
Motors will run more reliably and efficiently when properly loaded, and you will save money and energy in the short and long term.  This technology update enables you to determine the load factor and efficiency of your electric motors.  You can use that information to identify motors that should be replaced with a different size or increased efficiency model. A motor load and operating cost analysis form is included.

5. Reducing Power Factor Costby Bonneville Power Administration, 4 pgs.
Low power factor is expensive and inefficient, and reduces your electrical system’s distribution capacity.  This technology update describes power factor and explains how you can improve your power factor to reduce electric bills, and enhance you electrical system’s capacity.

6. Replacing an Oversized and Underloaded Electric Motor
 by Bonneville Power Administration, 6 pgs.
This technology update will assist in decisions regarding replacement of oversized and underloaded motors.  A discussion of how the MotorMaster software can be used to conduct motor replacement analysis is included.
7. The Impacts of the Energy Policy Act of on the Industrial End-Users of Electric Motor-Driven Systems
 by US Department of Energy, 4 pgs.
This publication answers 14 frequently asked questions about the impacts of this federal legislation on industrial motor end-users.  Questions include: What kinds of motors are exempt?  Do the standards apply to existing motors?  Who will test and certify the efficiency of motors?
8. Premium Efficiency Motor Selection Handbook
 by the US Department of Energy, 136 pgs.
This 
handbook was designed to identify opportunities for cost-effective application of energy efficient motors.  The handbook shows you how to assess energy savings and cost effectiveness when making motor purchase decisions. Operational factors that impact motor purchase actions are considered. Sections on high efficiency motor speed characteristics, performance under part-load conditions, operation with an abnormal power supply, and additional sources of information are provided.  This is a useful tool for plant managers and engineers, and others interested in energy management or preventative maintenance.

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