Manufacturers also offer motors in
sizes up to 200 hp that exceed minimum
NEMA Premium efficiency levels,
but such motors have not received
formal recognition as an efficiency
class as of the date of this publication.
These induction motors achieve their
high efficiencies through the use of
better technology, higher-quality materials
and tighter production controls.
One variety utilizes a die-cast copper
(rather than aluminum) rotor, whose
lower resistivity reduces electrical (I2R)
losses — thus increasing efficiency
by one-to-five percentage points. It
should be noted that even a one-point
rise in efficiency in any class of motors
translates into very large savings over a
motor’s service life. Moreover — since
lower electrical losses equate to lower
heat gain in the motor, the risk of damage
to winding insulation is reduced.
Therefore these motors — NEMA Premium
in particular — are expected
to operate longer before failure. Data
supporting that expectation is not
available yet, but manufacturers are
generally offering longer warranties for
these products.
Having sorted out the plant’s motors
by efficiency category, a performance
history must be collected from all relevant
nameplate data of all relevant
motors, i.e. — those from which energy/
cost savings can be realized. This
data includes make and model, horsepower
rating, synchronous and fullload
speed, voltage rating, frame size,
enclosure type and special- or definite-
purpose requirements for such
application as wash-down, severe or
inverter duty. A comprehensive motor
management plan would also require
historical data such as cost, plant application,
location and date of installation,
plus failure and repair/rewind
history. Some companies’
motor management
plans call for the
immediate replacement
of “problematic”
motors at the outset,
based on recurring
maintenance requirements.
Horsepower Breakpoint,
MotorMaster + and Other Tools
Creating motor inventory requires inspecting
the nameplate of every motor
in the plant. Or, in the interest of reducing
personnel costs, at least assessing
the critical motors — to be described
below — and then recording the data.
Large plants may house several thousand
operating motors, and several
hundred more as spares — making
data-gathering a daunting task. McCoy
and other motor experts recommend
establishing a screening process to reduce
the number of motors that must
be assessed.
One such expert is Kitt Butler, director,
motors and drives at Advanced
Energy Corporation (AEC), Raleigh,
North Carolina. AEC was, in fact, the
first independent laboratory in the U.S.
to gain certification for testing motor
efficiency — a service it has offered
globally since the early 1990s. Butler
recommends a screening process, also
developed at AEC, that involves calculating
a limit, called a “horsepower
breakpoint.” The breakpoint defines
the motor size for a given duty cycle, at
which point it becomes cost-effective
to replace an operating motor with a
new NEMA Premium efficiency model.
Graphically, horsepower breakpoint is
the point at which plots of motor rating
and annual-operating-hour-data
cross for a given utility rate (Fig. 1). It
is calculated based on motor size (hp),
nameplate efficiency, annual-operating-
hours and cost-of-electricity. A
breakpoint calculator is available at:
www.advancedenergy.org/md/knowledge_
library/resources/ Horsepower%
20Bulletin.pdf.
Figure 1 NEMA Premium Plus motor with die cast copper rotor.
- Click image to enlarge
Making the breakpoint calculation
before engaging in the full motor assessment
quickly establishes a limit for
groups of motors operating under similar
circumstances. This eliminates the
need to assess all such motors, since
the repair/replace decision is already
known.
Perhaps the most popular motor assessment
tool in current use is Motor-
Master+ software, distributed free of
charge to U.S. addresses by the DOE
at: www1.eere.energy.gov/manufacturing/
tech_deployment/ software_
motormaster.html. This tool is a data
management application with which
users can compare the cost of repair
with the cost of new replacement for
industrial motors under any operating
conditions and for any utility rate
(Fig. 2). The databases upon which
the software relies are updated periodically
by the WSU “Extension Energy
Program.” Databases include nameplate
information from thousands of
commercially available motors, prices
and dealer discounts, plus repair and
installation costs. Modules embedded
within the software provide the ability
to conduct batch analyses and calculate
energy and cost savings, project
simple payback periods, conduct life-cycle analyses, log maintenance action
for both motors and driven equipment,
manage spare inventories, verify
savings and display aggregate energy
and dollar savings from implemented
energy efficiency measures at the facility
or corporate level. Results can be
stored, electronically distributed and/
or printed.
Figure 2 Typical horsepower breakpoint graph showing values for two utility rates (courtesy
Advanced Energy Corporation).
- Click image to enlarge
Other widely used motor management
tools include a spreadsheet-
based application offered by
AEC — www.advancedenergy.org/
md — and the 1-2-3 motor analyzer
available from CEE’s “Motor Decisions
Matter” program at www.motorsmatter.
org/index.asp. Motor manufacturers
offer proprietary programs, as well.
Repair or Replace?
After having assembled an inventory
of assessed motors, what happens next
depends on the need at hand. The data
can provide a reference base for future
actions. For convenience, each motor
can be identified by location, application,
and nameplate data to provide
reordering information; e.g.:
- Is this a “critical” motor?
- If it is cited “for replacement upon
failure,” is a spare available inhouse?
- Is the spare a new NEMA Premium
efficiency model or a repaired
stand-by?
- And where is it?
- How soon can the local distributor
supply a replacement?
- Should the failed motor be
scrapped, or repaired and stored in
inventory?
- What periodic maintenance is
required and when?
- Has data logging been conducted
to reveal a motor’s load profile, or
have any specialized tests — such
as vibration analysis, insulation
resistance testing or polarization
index tests — been performed
on the motor, and what do they
suggest?
Test results, maintenance actions
and field measurements can be appended
to the motor’s file to provide
instant access by facility maintenance
staff, millwrights, plant electricians
and purchasing department.
But the key question, of course, remains:
Which motors should be repaired
upon failure, and which ones
should be replaced with new NEMA
Premium efficiency models?
The HP Breakpoint calculation described
above provides a “go/no go”
answer to that question. And then MotorMaster+
does so with considerably
more detail — suggesting alternative
replacements; spelling out projected
energy and cost savings; predicting
simple paybacks and performing lifecycle
cost analyses; and calculating reductions
in greenhouse gas emissions.
As Advanced Energy’s motors and
drives consultant, Dr. Emmanuel
Agamloh, P.E., puts it, “The decision
to repair or replace is handled differently
by different plants. Some plants
settle on a fixed horsepower below
which they don’t want to consider
repair. Other plants use detailed economics
of the specific situation, including
payback and lifecycle costs.
Repair costs are typically lower than
the cost of a new motor (for larger motors),
but if you factor in the operating
costs, there are some differences that
you have to take into account. NEMA
Premium efficiency motors cost more
than EPAct motors, or repairing older motors, but operating costs of old, inefficient
motors add up quickly. For
motors in the range below 50 hp or
so, it probably does not make sense to
repair. But as you go higher in motor
rating, repair becomes more competitive.
Some repair companies, in particular
those that are certified under
Advanced Energy’s Proven Efficiency
Verification (PEV) Program, can repair
motors and recapture their initial efficiency.
Lower-quality repair usually
leads to a decrease in efficiency and
an increase in operating costs over the
life of the repaired motor.” For a list of
PEV-approved repair shops, see www.
advancedenergy.org/md/consulting/
repair_shop_selection.php.
There are alternatives to setting up
a formal MotorMaster+-based repair/
replace protocol. Some industries have
blanket policies of replacing motors
when the cost of repair exceeds 60% of
the new motor cost, while others immediately
scrap failed motors below 50
hp and replace them with NEMA Premium
efficiency models. Many large
plants systematically discard a failed
motor smaller than 60 hp and repair
motors above this size. An alternative
approach is to conduct a survey of local
motor repair costs and compare those
costs with discounted new-motor
prices. For 20 hp and smaller — 1,800-
rpm, TEFC motors — the cost of a new
NEMA Premium efficiency motor will
generally be less than the cost of repair,
according to WSU’s McCoy. The numbers
change slightly for 900-rpm and
3,600-rpm motors and for ODP (open,
drip-proof) motors. The assumption
is almost invariably valid for motors
smaller than 10 hp; “repair” in this
instance implies rewinding the motor
and replacing the motor bearings.
A final issue when considering repair/
replacement is the size of the
replacement motor. For motors that
operate below 100% of full-load, there
are those who suggest that energy savings
may be realized by downsizing to
a smaller horsepower of the same efficiency
class. Issues of frame size, shaft
alignment and over-current protection
aside, this action may be technically
possible under certain circumstances,
but is generally not recommended.
Motor efficiency tends to peak at 75-
80 percent of full loading, and larger
motors may be quite efficient down
to 25 percent of rated load. Efficiency
increases with horsepower rating;
therefore a smaller replacement motor
might exhibit lower peak efficiency
than a larger motor operating at reduced
load. Bottom line — old, inefficient
standard efficiency motors that
are over-sized and under-loaded could
be cost effectively replaced with smaller,
more efficient NEMA Premium
models, but the analysis must be conducted
carefully. It is rarely a good idea
to replace a larger motor with a smaller
motor of the same efficiency class.
Views from the Operating
Floor
CDA spoke with plant operating personnel,
purchasing agents, and maintenance
staff at a variety of installations.
All had undertaken or been provided
with a motor inventory-and-assessment
within the previous several years,
and all had taken actions based upon the results of those assessments. These
experienced individuals saw benefits
to their motor management program
based on the particular circumstances
of their respective operations.
Figure 4 The key question: which motors should be repaired upon failure, and which ones should
be replaced with new NEMA Premium Efficiency models?
- Click image to enlarge
Rick Streeter is the purchasing agent
for Qubica/AMF — the leading bowling
pin manufacturer in the U.S. His
plant, in Lowville, New York, turns out
between 8,000 – 10,000 bowling pins
per day. Electrical energy costs are very
high and the company pursues energy
savings through everything from improved
windows, insulation and lighting
to NEMA Premium efficiency motors.
“Our plant is old, and before the inventory
we didn’t even know what motors
we had,” Streeter said. “After the inventory,
we learned that we had more
than 100 really inefficient motors. We
started changing them immediately.
We looked at 232 motors in total, and
we still have a way to go with replacements.
We haven’t replaced anything
with motors that weren’t NEMA Premium.
“MotorMaster+ works very well for
me, because in purchasing I’ll have the
maintenance guys or supervisors tell
me they need a motor on a certain machine,
so all I have to do is look it up on
MotorMaster+ and I know exactly what
type it is and where it goes and what to
order. That’s mainly what I use it for.
“The three things I look for when replacing
a motor are cost, the time that
it runs, and its efficiency. We look for
replacements that give us a payback
under two years. I’ll only repair special motors. Otherwise, we always go with
NEMA Premium because they’re more
efficient, you have less to worry about,
and we see a decrease in downtime.”
Joe Anderson is maintenance manager
at Interface Solutions, Beaver
Falls, New York. The company is the
world’s largest supplier of automotive
gaskets.
“Our motor distributor told us about
the motor management program,” Anderson
said. “He even came in and surveyed
our entire motor inventory — including
our spares. We have about
150 motors in service, and 125–130
in spares. One of the things we have
to do to remain competitive is watch
our costs for electricity and steam. We
have shift mechanics who work 24/7
and they inspect every motor once a
week and inform me when a motor
is getting bad. We can change almost
any motor within an hour. Keeping our
downtime to a minimum, MotorMaster+
is very helpful. We went after the
low-hanging fruit it identified based
on 24/7 operation at high loads. There
were a few motors that we swapped
out with new NEMA Premium replacements
that were running fine. When
we have a failure, we replace the motor
with a NEMA Premium. We also threw
out seven or eight stock old motors and
replaced them with NEMA Premium.
Within the past three years we replaced
probably 17–18 motors and keep seven
or eight new NEMA Premium motors
in stores. We don’t rewind.” 
Acknowledgements. CDA acknowledges
the help of government- and
industry-based motor experts in the
creation of this Motor Management
Best Practices series. Individuals cited
in the recent publication include: Gilbert
A. (Gil) McCoy, P.E. Energy Systems
Engineer with the Washington
State University (WSU) Energy Extension
Office, Olympia, Washington. He
can be reached at (360) 956-2086, mccoyg@
energy.wsu.edu; Kitt Butler, Director,
Motors and Drives at Advanced
Energy Corporation (AEC), Raleigh,
North Carolina (919) 857-9017, kbutler@
advancedenergy.org; Emmanuel
Agamloh, Ph.D., P.E. Motor Systems
Engineer Advanced Energy Corporation,
Raleigh, North Carolina (919)
857-9023, eagamloh@advancedenergy.
org; Bruce Benkhart, Director, Advanced
Proactive Technologies, Springfield,
Massachusetts. Benkhart can be
reached at (413) 731-6546 bruce@appliedproactive.
com.
About Author
Bruce Benkhart
Kitt Butler
Emmanuel Agamloh
Gilbert A. (Gil) McCoy