This technical guide explains how to quickly size an electrical disconnect switch from load current.
Including operational considerations, continuous duty, fault interrupting ratings, maintenance, environmental factors, and coordination practices commonly.
Disconnect Switch Sizing from Load Current (Selection to Nearest Standard Rating)
Overview of purpose, applicability, and regulatory context
A disconnect switch isolates equipment from supply for safety, maintenance, and emergency stopping. Proper sizing prevents nuisance trips, overheating, and hazardous overloads. Key regulatory frameworks and product standards that influence sizing decisions:- NEC (NFPA 70) — Articles governing motor circuits, branch-circuit conductor ampacity, overcurrent protection, and disconnecting means.
- IEC 60947-3 — Requirements for switch-disconnectors used internationally.
- UL standards (UL 98, UL 508) and NEMA publication guidance — product safety and rating conformance in North America.
- Local utility interconnection rules and transient fault studies — determine required interrupting and making capacity.
Core electrical relationships for calculating load current
Accurate current calculation begins with the correct representation of load power. Use these formulas written in plain HTML text.Single-phase resistive load
I = P / V
- I = load current (A)
- P = real power (W)
- V = line-to-neutral or line-to-line voltage depending on supply (V). For single-phase V is the supply voltage.
Single-phase with power factor
I = P / (V × PF)
- PF = power factor (dimensionless, 0 to 1). Typical PF for mixed commercial loads: 0.8–0.95.
Three-phase balanced loads (apparent power form)
I = S / (√3 × V_line)
- I = line current (A)
- S = apparent power (VA) = P / PF (for non-resistive loads)
- V_line = line-to-line voltage (V), common industrial values: 400 V, 415 V, 480 V
- √3 is the square root of three (approx. 1.732)
Three-phase using real power and PF
I = P / (√3 × V_line × PF)
- P = real power (W)
- PF = power factor (unitless)
From horsepower to current (motors)
P_mech = HP × 746
P_input = P_mech / Efficiency
I = P_input / (√3 × V_line × PF)
- HP = motor horsepower
- Efficiency = motor efficiency (decimal). Typical 0.85–0.96 depending on frame and load.
- PF = motor power factor (typical 0.8–0.95)
Rounding and standard disconnect switch sizes
Manufacturers make disconnect switches in standardized ampere ratings. Best practice: compute the required continuous or starting current, apply code-required multipliers (if any), then round up to the next standard rating. Common standard ampere ratings (non-exhaustive): 15, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100, 110, 125, 150, 175, 200, 225, 250, 300, 400, 600, 800.| Standard Disconnect Rating (A) | Typical applications | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 15–20 | Small feeders, lighting, receptacles | Residential and light commercial circuits |
| 30–60 | Small motors, air handlers, small compressors | Common for 1–10 HP motors at low voltages |
| 70–100 | Medium motors, small motor control centers | Used for 10–50 HP motors depending on voltage |
| 110–200 | Main feeders, larger motors, HVAC equipment | Typical for larger commercial equipment |
| 225–400 | Large feeders, MCC mains | Industrial distribution and large motor protection |
| 600–800 | Service entrance or large distribution switches | High capacity switch disconnects and service equipment |
Rules of thumb and code-based multipliers
- Select a disconnect rating >= the supply conductor ampacity required by code for that load.
- For continuous loads (operation >3 hours), size conductors and protective devices per applicable code multipliers — common practice is to design for a higher percentage (e.g., 125% for some continuous applications); verify the exact multiplier in the controlling code such as NEC Article 310 and Article 430 for motors.
- Always ensure the switch's short-circuit and interrupting rating (kA RMS) is at or above the available fault current at the point of installation.
Interrupting rating, short-circuit capacity, and coordination
Disconnect selection is not only ampacity-based: the device must interrupt the available fault current safely. Interrupting rating is expressed as symmetrical RMS current at a given voltage (for example 10 kA at 480 V). Key points:- Obtain the available fault current (prospective short-circuit current) from a coordination study, utility data, or calculation.
- Select a disconnect with interrupting rating ≥ available fault current at the installation point and the specified voltage.
- Consider coordination with upstream and downstream protective devices (fuses, MCCBs) to ensure selective clearing and minimal service interruption.
| Industry standard interrupting ratings (examples) | Typical catalog marking |
|---|---|
| 10 kA | Low fault level commercial installations |
| 25 kA | Common industrial applications |
| 65 kA | High-fault commercial and light industrial |
| 100 kA or higher | Utility and heavy industrial service equipment |
Detailed workflow: sizing a disconnect switch from measured or calculated load current
Step-by-step approach:- Determine load types and powers (real power P or HP for motors) and duty (continuous, intermittent, starting frequency).
- Calculate steady-state full-load current for each load using the formulas above. Include PF and efficiency where applicable.
- Aggregate loads: for parallel circuits, sum currents; apply diversity or demand factors when allowed by code.
- Apply code multipliers for conductor ampacity or for continuous loads.
- Round up the resulting current requirement to the nearest standard disconnect rating.
- Verify the chosen disconnect’s short-circuit interrupting rating ≥ available fault current.
- Confirm environmental and thermal derating (ambient temperature, enclosure type, altitudes) per manufacturer guidance.
- Document selection rationale and include nameplate information on the equipment schedule.
Typical values and tables for common equipment
Below are tables with common currents and practical reference values. Use these as quick lookup aids; verify against actual nameplate data.| Motor HP | Full-load current @ 480 V, 3-phase (approx.) | Full-load current @ 400 V, 3-phase (approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 HP | 1.5 A | 1.8 A |
| 3 HP | 4.5 A | 5.4 A |
| 5 HP | 7.5 A | 9.0 A |
| 10 HP | 14 A | 17 A |
| 25 HP | 33 A | 40 A |
| 50 HP | 62 A | 74 A |
| 75 HP | 85 A | 102 A |
| 100 HP | 110 A | 132 A |
| Common load type | Power factor typical | Design consideration |
|---|---|---|
| Resistive heater | 1.0 | Continuous; size for full current without PF reduction |
| Induction motor | 0.8–0.95 | High inrush starting current; consider motor starters or appropriately rated switch |
| Lighting (LED) | 0.9–0.99 | Often non-continuous; sum diversified circuits |
| Power electronics (drives) | 0.95–0.99 | Harmonics and derating may apply |
Practical engineering examples with full calculations
Example 1: Sizing a disconnect for a 50 HP motor at 480 V, 3-phase
Given:- Motor rating: 50 HP
- Supply: 480 V, 3-phase
- Assume efficiency = 94% (0.94) and power factor = 0.90 (0.9)
- Available fault current at point of installation = 25 kA RMS
P_mech = HP × 746 = 50 × 746 = 37,300 W
P_input = P_mech / Efficiency = 37,300 / 0.94 = 39,680 W (approx.)
S = P_input / PF = 39,680 / 0.90 = 44,089 VA
I = S / (√3 × V_line) = 44,089 / (1.732 × 480) = 44,089 / 831.36 = 53.05 A
Interpretation:- Computed steady-state current ≈ 53.1 A (this is the full-load current for sizing conductors and for comparison with switch ratings).
- If the motor is considered continuous under expected operation and local code requires conductor sizing at 125% for continuous loads, apply that multiplier: 53.05 × 1.25 = 66.31 A.
- Round up to the next standard disconnect rating: from the standard list, choose 70 A.
- Verify interrupting rating: available fault current is 25 kA; therefore, the selected disconnect must have an interrupting rating ≥ 25 kA at 480 V. If standard 70 A switch is rated only 10 kA, select a model with 25 kA or add upstream device coordination/limiting fuse.
- Disconnect rating: 70 A (next standard above 66.31 A)
- Interrupting rating: ≥ 25 kA at 480 V
- Optional: use a fused disconnect sized to coordinate with motor starter or to limit fault current if necessary
Example 2: Combined loads on a 480 V three-phase feeder
Scenario:- Feeder supplies: one 25 HP motor, one 10 HP motor, a 30 kW resistive heater, and 5 kW of lighting
- Motors: efficiency = 92% (0.92), PF = 0.9
- Lighting PF = 0.9; heater PF = 1.0
- Assume loads are simultaneously likely; treat heater as continuous load subject to continuous sizing rules
P_mech1 = 25 × 746 = 18,650 W
P_input1 = 18,650 / 0.92 = 20,274 W
S1 = 20,274 / 0.90 = 22,526 VA
I1 = 22,526 / (1.732 × 480) = 22,526 / 831.36 = 27.09 A
P_mech2 = 10 × 746 = 7,460 W
P_input2 = 7,460 / 0.92 = 8,109 W
S2 = 8,109 / 0.90 = 9,010 VA
I2 = 9,010 / 831.36 = 10.83 A
I3 = P / (√3 × V) = 30,000 / 831.36 = 36.08 A
S4 = 5,000 / 0.9 = 5,556 VA
I4 = 5,556 / 831.36 = 6.69 A
I_total = I1 + I2 + I3 + I4 = 27.09 + 10.83 + 36.08 + 6.69 = 80.69 A

I_required = max(I_total, heater portion rules). Conservative approach: apply 1.25 to total if the code compels continuous load derating for conductors/protection.
I_required = 80.69 × 1.25 = 100.86 A
- Next standard sizes: 110 A or 125 A. Choose 125 A if you require margin for future load expansion or if manufacturer ratings or environmental derating reduces switch continuous current capability.
- Assume available fault current at feeder is 35 kA; select a disconnect rated ≥ 35 kA at 480 V.
- Disconnect rating: 125 A (conservative, accounts for continuous load derating)
- Interrupting rating: ≥ 35 kA at 480 V
- Consider selective coordination: use fuses or breakers sized to coordinate with upstream devices
Environmental, derating, and practical installation considerations
When selecting a disconnect size and model, evaluate:- Ambient temperature and thermal derating tables from manufacturer — higher ambient reduces allowable continuous current.
- Altitude corrections for ventilation and rated current if applicable.
- Enclosure type (NEMA/IEC IP rating) — some enclosures reduce current capability due to heat trapping.
- Harmonic content from drives and nonlinear loads — may require derating or specialized switchgear.
- Accessibility and emergency operation clearances per local code.
- Availability of a fused disconnect if coordination or limiting of fault current is required.
Best-practice checklist before final procurement
- Confirm nameplate full-load current (FLC) for motors and measured power for other loads.
- Calculate feeder current using correct formulas and include PF and efficiency for motors.
- Apply code-required multipliers for continuous loads and conductor sizing.
- Round up to next standard disconnect rating and verify thermal limits under ambient conditions.
- Confirm interrupting/symmetrical breaking capacity ≥ available fault current.
- Specify whether fused or non-fused disconnects are required and the fuse class/type for coordination.
- Document manufacturer model, rating, SCCR, and supporting calculations in equipment schedule.
References, standards, and further authoritative guidance
- NFPA 70, National Electrical Code (NEC). See the authoritative resource at NFPA: https://www.nfpa.org/
- IEC 60947-3: Low-voltage switchgear and controlgear — Switches, disconnectors, switch-disconnectors: https://www.iec.ch/
- UL Standards: UL 98 (enclosed and dead-front switches), UL 508 (industrial control equipment). See UL standards catalog: https://www.ul.com/
- NEMA standards and guides on switches and industrial controls: https://www.nema.org/
- Manufacturer technical guides and catalogs (Siemens, Eaton, Schneider Electric, ABB) for product-specific ratings and derating tables: e.g., https://www.eaton.com/ , https://new.abb.com/ , https://www.se.com/
Summary of key technical points (quick reference)
- Calculate steady-state current using accurate P, PF, and efficiency values.
- Apply code multipliers for continuous loads; round up to standard switch sizes.
- Ensure interrupting rating ≥ available fault current at installation point.
- Check environmental derating and enclosure effects on continuous rating.
- Document all calculations and keep a record of nameplate and selected device ratings.