UL 1004:2018-06 Electronically Protected Motors.
1.1 UL 1004 is intended to be read together with the Standard for Rotating Electrical Machines — General Requirements. UL 1004-1. The requirements in this Standard supplement or amend the requirements in UL 1004-1. The requirements of UL 1004-1 apply unless modified by this Standard.
1.2 Motors covered by this Standard. whose overheating protection is provided by an electronic circuit, shall additionally comply with the requirements contained in the Standard for Thermally Protected Motors. UL 1004-3, with regard to Construction, Performance, Manufacturing and Production Tests, Markings, and Instructions unless modified by this Standard.
1.3 This Standard applies to motors that rely upon an electronic circuit to prevent overheating of the motor.
1.4 The requirements in this Standard are intended to evaluate a specific motor/electronic protector combination. When the motor, the electronic protector, or the motor/electronic protector combination is changed, the combination shall be reevaluated.
1.5 The requirements in this Standard do not cover sealed (hermetic) type compressor motors.
1.6 This Standard does not apply to motors that comply with the Standard for Impedance Protected Motors, UL 1004-2, or the Standard for Thermally Protected Motors, UL 1004-3, independent of the electronic circuit.
2 Components
2.1 Controls used to provide overheating protection for motors covered by this Standard shall comply with
the requirements for protective controls contained in the Standard for Automatic Electrical Controls — Part 1: General Requirements, UL 60730-1, or the applicable requirements in Sections 9— 17.
3 Glossary
3.1 For the purpose of this Standard, the following definitions apply.
3.2 INTENTIONALLY WEAK PART — A part intended to rupture under conditions of abnormal operation to prevent the occurrence of a condition which could impair compliance with this standard.
3.3 LOW-POWER CIRCUIT — A circuit or parts of circuits farther from the supply source than a low-power point.
3.6 PROTECTION SCHEME — A combination of sensing and control circuits. Examples include the following:
a) A combination of rotation sensing (i.e., Hall effect sensor) and a control circuit designed to take corrective action (i.e., deenergize the motor in the event that the Hall effect sensor senses a lack of intended motor speed);
b) A combination of current sensing and a control circuit designed to take corrective action in the event that excessive motor current is detected.
Electronic protection circuits may incorporate one or many protection schemes to provide primary or redundant overheating protection for a motor.
4 Application of Requirements
4.1 The protection scheme or schemes relied upon to provide freedom from motor overheating due to the causes described in 6.5 (a) — (C) shall be identified and then validated through test and evaluation to either:
a) The Standard for Automatic Electrical Controls — Part 1: General Requirements, UL 60730-1; or
b) The UL 60335-1 based requirements in Sections 9 — 17.
4.2 Protection scheme(s) provided but not relied upon to provide freedom from motor overheating shall be disabled during evaluation and testing of the scheme(s) described in 4.1.
4.3 The circuitry associated with those scheme(s) described in 4.2, that are not relied upon to provide freedom from motor overheating, shall only be evaluated as operating circuits not as protective circuits.UL 1004 pdf download.