Worked Example: HVAC Electrical System Sizing for Dual-Mode Heating/Cooling — The Texas Winter Storm Uri Disaster
Complete HVAC electrical sizing calculation for a commercial building with heat pump and auxiliary resistance heating. Covers NEC 440 motor circuits, NEC 424 resistance heating, summer vs winter demand comparison, feeder sizing, and disconnect requirements — and why the 2021 Texas storm proved that designing only for summer cooling loads is a fatal oversight.
The Incident: When a Summer-Designed Grid Met a Winter Emergency
In February 2021, Winter Storm Uri struck Texas with unprecedented cold. Temperatures plummeted to −19°C (−2°F) in Dallas — a city where the design winter temperature is typically 19°F (−7°C). Over five days, 246 people died and damages exceeded $195 billion, making it one of the costliest natural disasters in US history. The ERCOT electrical grid collapsed because electricity demand reached 76.8 GW, far exceeding the winter design capacity of 67.5 GW.
The demand surge was overwhelmingly driven by electric heating. Texas relies heavily on heat pumps for space heating — systems that are efficient in mild conditions but switch to auxiliary resistance heating when the outdoor temperature drops below their balance point (typically 0–5°C). A heat pump running on its compressor draws perhaps 5–8 kW; that same unit on auxiliary strip heating draws 15–25 kW. Across millions of homes and commercial buildings, this switchover tripled the electrical demand overnight. Residential circuits overloaded as occupants plugged in portable space heaters on circuits originally designed for summer cooling loads.
The core engineering lesson is this: HVAC electrical systems must be designed for the governing load case, which may be winter heating rather than summer cooling. In climates with significant heating loads, NEC 440 (motor-driven HVAC) and NEC 424 (fixed electric space heating) prescribe different sizing rules that must be compared to determine which case governs. This worked example demonstrates that comparison for a commercial building HVAC plant.
Scenario: Commercial Building HVAC Electrical System
Size the electrical system for a commercial building HVAC plant operating in both cooling and heating modes.
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Building | 3-storey office building, 5,000 m² (54,000 ft²) |
| Supply voltage | 480/277 V three-phase, 60 Hz |
| Rooftop units (RTUs) | 4 × 75 kW (25 TR) heat pump units with auxiliary resistance heating |
| RTU compressor motor | 25 kW each, FLA 35.2 A at 480 V |
| RTU condenser fan motor | 3.7 kW each, FLA 5.5 A at 480 V |
| RTU auxiliary heater | 60 kW resistance strip, 72.2 A at 480 V per unit |
| AHU supply fans | 2 × 30 kW, FLA 40.1 A at 480 V each |
| Chilled water pumps | 2 × 7.5 kW, FLA 11.0 A at 480 V each |
| Primary standard | NEC/NFPA 70:2023, ASHRAE 90.1-2022 |
Step 1: Calculate Cooling Mode Electrical Load
In cooling mode, each RTU runs its compressor motor, condenser fan, and supply fan (evaporator fan is part of the AHU). Per NEC 440.6, motor loads are based on nameplate full-load amperes (FLA).
Per RTU (cooling mode):
IRTU,cool = Icompressor + Icondenser fan = 35.2 + 5.5 = 40.7 A — (Eq. 1)
Total cooling mode load (all HVAC):
| Equipment | Quantity | FLA Each (A) | Total FLA (A) |
|---|---|---|---|
| RTU compressor + condenser fan | 4 | 40.7 | 162.8 |
| AHU supply fans | 2 | 40.1 | 80.2 |
| Chilled water pumps | 2 | 11.0 | 22.0 |
Itotal,cool = 162.8 + 80.2 + 22.0 = 265.0 A — (Eq. 2)
Total cooling mode demand: 265.0 A at 480 V three-phase = √3 × 480 × 265.0 = 220.3 kVA
Step 2: Calculate Heating Mode Electrical Load
In heating mode, the heat pump compressor runs in reverse cycle down to a balance point. Below the balance point, auxiliary resistance heating activates. In extreme cold (as during Storm Uri), the compressor may shut down entirely and the entire heating load falls on the resistance strips.
Per RTU (heating mode, extreme cold — compressor off):
IRTU,heat = Iauxiliary heater = 60,000 / (√3 × 480) = 72.2 A — (Eq. 3)
Per RTU (heating mode, mild cold — compressor + auxiliary):
IRTU,dual = Icompressor + Iauxiliary heater = 35.2 + 72.2 = 107.4 A
Total heating mode load (worst case: dual-mode, all RTUs):
| Equipment | Quantity | FLA Each (A) | Total FLA (A) |
|---|---|---|---|
| RTU compressor + aux heater | 4 | 107.4 | 429.6 |
| AHU supply fans | 2 | 40.1 | 80.2 |
| Chilled water pumps | 0 (off in heating) | — | 0 |
Itotal,heat = 429.6 + 80.2 = 509.8 A — (Eq. 4)
Total heating mode demand: √3 × 480 × 509.8 = 423.7 kVA
The heating load is 1.92× the cooling load. This is the fundamental lesson of Storm Uri — winter heating demand can nearly double summer cooling demand when resistance heating engages.
Step 3: Size RTU Branch Circuits (NEC 440 + 424)
Each RTU has both motor and resistance heating loads. Per NEC 440.33, the branch circuit for a combination load must be sized for the sum of the motor load (per NEC 440) and the heater load (per NEC 424).
Motor component per NEC 440.6:
Imotor,branch = 125% × largest motor FLA + sum of other motors — (Eq. 5)
Imotor,branch = 1.25 × 35.2 + 5.5 = 44.0 + 5.5 = 49.5 A
Heater component per NEC 424.3(A):
Fixed electric space heating is a continuous load. Per NEC 424.3(A), branch circuit conductors for resistance heaters must be rated at not less than 125% of the total heater load:
Iheater,branch = 125% × 72.2 = 90.3 A — (Eq. 6)
Combined RTU branch circuit:
IRTU,branch = Imotor,branch + Iheater,branch = 49.5 + 90.3 = 139.8 A — (Eq. 7)
Select conductor from NEC Table 310.16 (75°C column, copper, THWN-2): 1/0 AWG rated 150 A. ✓ 150 ≥ 139.8 A
Step 4: Size RTU Branch Circuit Protection
Per NEC 440.22, the branch circuit short-circuit and ground-fault protective device for the motor component must not exceed 175% of the largest motor FLA (for inverse-time circuit breaker).
IOCPD,motor = 175% × 35.2 = 61.6 A (round up to next standard: 70 A) — (Eq. 8)
Per NEC 424.19, the heater branch circuit OCPD must not exceed the heater nameplate rating. For the combined load:
IOCPD,combined = IOCPD,motor + Iheater = 70 + 72.2 = 142.2 A
Select next standard circuit breaker size: 150 A MCCB per NEC 240.6(A).
Verify conductor protection: 150 A OCPD protecting 1/0 AWG (150 A ampacity) — ✓ PASS
Step 5: Determine Governing Case — Summer vs Winter
Compare the two load scenarios to determine which governs the feeder and service sizing:
| Parameter | Cooling Mode (Summer) | Heating Mode (Winter) |
|---|---|---|
| RTU current (each) | 40.7 A | 107.4 A |
| RTU total (4 units) | 162.8 A | 429.6 A |
| AHU fans | 80.2 A | 80.2 A |
| Chilled water pumps | 22.0 A | 0 A |
| Total HVAC load | 265.0 A | 509.8 A |
| Apparent power | 220.3 kVA | 423.7 kVA |
The winter heating mode governs at 509.8 A — nearly double the summer cooling load.
Step 6: Size HVAC Feeder
Per NEC 440.6 and 430.24, the feeder must be sized for 125% of the largest motor plus the sum of all other loads:
Largest motor: AHU supply fan, 40.1 A (larger than RTU compressor at 35.2 A).
Ifeeder = 125% × 40.1 + (80.2 − 40.1) + 429.6 — (Eq. 9)
Ifeeder = 50.1 + 40.1 + 429.6
Ifeeder = 519.8 A
Note: The resistance heating components are already at 125% from the branch circuit calculation (NEC 424.3 applies at every level — branch, feeder, and service).
Select feeder conductor from NEC Table 310.16 (75°C column, copper, THWN-2): 1000 kcmil rated 545 A. Alternatively, two parallel sets of 3/0 AWG (200 A each × 2 = 400 A) would be insufficient; use two parallel sets of 250 kcmil (255 A × 2 = 510 A) — marginally short. Select two parallel sets of 300 kcmil (285 A × 2 = 570 A).
Feeder: 2 sets of 300 kcmil THWN-2 copper per phase (570 A capacity)
Step 7: Calculate Voltage Drop on Longest HVAC Branch
The longest RTU branch circuit runs 60 m (200 ft) from the HVAC panel to the rooftop unit. For 1/0 AWG copper at 480 V three-phase:
From NEC Chapter 9, Table 9: 1/0 AWG copper in PVC conduit, R = 0.122 Ω/1000 ft, X = 0.044 Ω/1000 ft.
ΔV = √3 × I × L × (R cosφ + X sinφ) / 1000 — (Eq. 10)
At maximum load (dual mode), I = 107.4 A, L = 200 ft, power factor = 0.95 (blended motor + resistive):
ΔV = 1.732 × 107.4 × 200 × (0.122 × 0.95 + 0.044 × 0.312) / 1000
ΔV = 1.732 × 107.4 × 200 × (0.1159 + 0.0137) / 1000
ΔV = 37,203 × 0.1296 / 1000
ΔV = 4.82 V
ΔV% = 4.82 / 480 × 100 = 1.00%
The NEC recommendation for branch circuits is 3% maximum, with 5% total (branch + feeder). At 1.00%, voltage drop is well within limits. ✓ PASS
Step 8: Size HVAC Disconnect Switches
Per NEC 440.12, each HVAC unit disconnect must have an ampere rating at least 115% of the nameplate rated-load current:
RTU disconnect (combined motor + heater):
Idisconnect = 115% × IRTU,max = 1.15 × 107.4 = 123.5 A — (Eq. 11)
Select standard disconnect: 150 A fusible disconnect switch per NEC 440.12(A)(1).
The disconnect must be within sight of the equipment and readily accessible per NEC 440.14. For rooftop units, this typically means a weather-rated NEMA 3R disconnect mounted on the roof near the unit.
AHU disconnect:
Idisconnect = 115% × 40.1 = 46.1 A → 60 A disconnect
Chilled water pump disconnect:
Idisconnect = 115% × 11.0 = 12.7 A → 30 A disconnect
Result Summary
| Component | Cooling Mode | Heating Mode | Sized For |
|---|---|---|---|
| RTU branch circuit | 40.7 A (motor only) | 107.4 A (motor + aux) | 1/0 AWG, 150 A MCCB |
| AHU branch circuit | 40.1 A | 40.1 A | 8 AWG, 50 A CB |
| CW pump branch circuit | 11.0 A | 0 A | 12 AWG, 20 A CB |
| Total HVAC load | 265.0 A | 509.8 A | Heating governs |
| HVAC feeder | — | — | 2 × 300 kcmil/phase (570 A) |
| Voltage drop (longest branch) | — | 1.00% | ✓ PASS (< 3%) |
The governing load case is winter heating mode at 509.8 A — 92% larger than summer cooling at 265.0 A. Every component from branch circuits to the service entrance must be sized for the heating scenario. Designing only for the summer cooling load, as was common practice in Texas before Storm Uri, results in an electrical system that is approximately half the required capacity for extreme winter conditions.
What Would Have Prevented This?
The Texas grid failure during Storm Uri was a systemic crisis, but at the building level, proper HVAC electrical sizing could have prevented individual circuit overloads and building-level electrical failures:
- Always calculate both cooling and heating electrical loads and design for the governing case — NEC 220.60 explicitly requires this comparison; in climates with both significant cooling and heating loads, never assume that summer cooling governs
- Account for auxiliary resistance heating in heat pump systems — a heat pump with a 25 kW compressor and 60 kW auxiliary heater can draw up to 85 kW when both operate simultaneously; the electrical system must be sized for this combined condition, not just the compressor alone
- Apply NEC 424.3 continuous load rules to resistance heating — all conductors and overcurrent devices supplying fixed resistance heating must be rated at 125% of the heater current; this is a continuous load rule that catches many designers unaware
- Consider demand diversity carefully for large buildings — while NEC 220.51 allows demand factors for non-coincident loads, during extreme weather events ALL heating units operate simultaneously at maximum output, eliminating the diversity that designers may have counted on
- Evaluate gas heating as an alternative to reduce electrical demand — a building with gas-fired heating places no demand on the electrical system during winter; dual-fuel heat pumps that switch to gas below the balance point can dramatically reduce peak electrical demand and grid strain
Try the HVAC Electrical Calculator
Put this methodology into practice. Calculate results with full standard clause references — free, no sign-up required.
Or embed this calculator on your siteFrequently Asked Questions
Related Resources
HVAC Electrical Calculator
Calculate HVAC electrical loads for both cooling and heating scenarios per NEC 440/424.
Read moreThe NEC 80% Rule Is Not What You Think
Understanding the continuous load rule that governs resistance heating sizing.
Read moreMaximum Demand Calculator
Calculate total building demand with HVAC loads and demand factors.
Read moreCable Derating: 12 Cables in a Tray at 40°C
HVAC systems with multiple cable runs face grouping derating.
Read more