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kVA to Amps & Generator Sizing Calculator

kVA to Amps Generator Sizing Calculator | TMUK Group Ltd

kVA & Generator Sizing Engine

Site Power, Temporary Supplies & Load Conversion

1. Calculation Type
2. Load Specifications
kW
3. Operational Variables
PF
0.8 is the standard default for commercial inductive loads.
%
Generators should only run at 80% capacity continuously to prevent engine wear (bore glazing).

Minimum Generator Size

0 kVA

Applying 80% Continuous Running Margin

Electrical Load Profile
Apparent Power 0.0 kVA
Real Power 0.0 kW
Current Specifications
Max Continuous Current 0 A

Understanding Generator Sizing & kVA Calculations

Specifying temporary power for construction sites, events, and emergency backup systems requires strict attention to electrical loads and engine mechanics. Sizing a generator purely based on the total kW load without factoring in Power Factor (cos φ) or continuous running limits will result in catastrophic failure, voltage drops, and severe engine damage.

1. The Difference Between kW and kVA

Generators are rated in kVA (Apparent Power), which is the total power the alternator can produce. However, most equipment is rated in kW (Real Power), which is the actual power consumed to perform work.

  • Real Power (kW): The amount of power converted into useful work (heat, light, mechanical force).
  • Reactive Power (kVAR): The power drawn by inductive loads (like motors and transformers) to sustain their magnetic fields, which does no useful work.
  • Apparent Power (kVA): The vector sum of kW and kVAR. It is the total power the generator must physically supply.

2. Power Factor (cos φ) Explained

The Power Factor is the ratio of Real Power (kW) to Apparent Power (kVA). Unless you are running purely resistive loads (like incandescent heaters where the PF is 1.0), you must account for reactive power.

For standard commercial and industrial site setups involving motors, power tools, and LED drivers, the industry standard Power Factor is 0.8. This means that a 100 kVA generator will only supply 80 kW of usable real power.

3. The 80% Continuous Running Rule

Diesel generators should never be run at 100% of their Prime Rating continuously. Doing so causes engine overheating and alternator degradation.

Conversely, running a diesel generator on a very light load (under 30%) causes "bore glazing" (unburnt fuel and oil baking onto the cylinder walls), destroying engine efficiency. The engineering best practice is to size your generator so that your maximum sustained, continuous load operates at exactly 80% of the generator's total capacity.

ENGINEERING DISCLAIMER: This calculator determines baseline kVA and running margins. It does not account for transient "inrush" or motor starting currents (which can be up to 7x the Full Load Amps). If you are powering large three-phase motors without Variable Frequency Drives (VFDs) or Soft Starters, the generator alternator must be oversized specifically to handle voltage dip during motor startup.