WshnIwslofn said:
Thanks for your replies.
So you are saying that I am ok with my 1hp uprated pump for my pool and HT. Am I paying more electric costs because it says 1 1/2hp when it is really only a 1 uprated?
Kay
Electric motors will try to turn a load like a pump even if they are vastly undersized. The HP that a motor is capable of producing is a function of its input power and wire size used in construction. If you overload a motor, the shaft can't turn and the excess current flowing in burns up the wires and melts things inside the motor. This lets all the smoke out, and once you let the smoke out, the motor is trash.
Uprated is an industry term that states how close you are operating the motor to the overload point where it will overheat and burn up. If the SF is 1, you don't have any slack. An SF of 1.15 means you can operate at 15% over the plate HP rating without problems. The appropriate SF for a motor in a particular application is a design decision that is made based on how likely the motor is to experience higher than rated load during use (and ambient operating temperatures), and how much over the rated capacity that load will likely be. Pool pumps are traditionally sized with 25% to 40% extra capacity or a SF of 1.25 to 1.40. The lower SF motor just can't handle extra stress like clogged filters etc. as well as one with a higher SF.
As to the electricity issue, every motor has a sweet spot where it is most efficient. This is usually somewhere near maximum load, so an uprated motor may actually be slightly more efficient than one that is at the normal SF for an application.
As to whether you can use that motor, you need to see what volume of water that motor can pump at your system's head, and then see how much flow your filter can handle.