What this worksheet captures
This worksheet is built to capture the field details that usually decide whether motor circuit verification can move into a quote, replacement, or engineering review.
It is meant to keep the intake practical, consistent, and easier to hand off between maintenance, engineering, and purchasing.
- motor data
- starter or contactor model
- overload or protection data
- control voltage
- wiring path or disconnect details
When to use it
Use it when the field information is incomplete, when multiple people are touching the job, or when the replacement path depends on details that are easy to miss over email or phone.
Checklist
Fill this in on-screen or print the page and carry it into the field so the same core details make it back to engineering, sourcing, or quote review.
| Check item | Status | Notes |
|---|---|---|
Motor data Pull these values from the installed motor or device nameplate so the replacement is based on real electrical data. |
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Starter or contactor model Use the label on the installed device and record the exact published model or catalog number. |
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Overload or protection data Inspect the installed equipment directly and note whether this checkpoint is verified, questionable, or not applicable. |
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Control voltage Measure or read the actual control voltage from the schematic, terminals, or powered circuit instead of assuming the nominal value. |
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Wiring path or disconnect details Use the installed wiring, one-line, or panel drawings so the replacement path can be checked against the real circuit. |
How to use it on site
Work from the installed equipment first, then collect the ratings, environment, fit notes, and related components that change the actual buying decision.
| Item | What it means in practice | Why buyers care |
|---|---|---|
| What it is | The device, rating, or concept in plain industrial language | A direct definition shortens the path into the correct product family. |
| What it affects | Selection, troubleshooting, protection, or compliance decisions tied to the topic | Readers usually need to know why the term changes the outcome. |
| What engineers verify | Nameplate data, ratings, fit, and the role the topic plays in the assembly | These checks keep the page useful beyond a vocabulary definition. |
| Common mix-up | The similar device, label, or shortcut that often causes wrong assumptions | This is where a lot of wrong-part orders start. |
What to verify before sending it on
A worksheet is most useful when the captured values are checked for completeness before they move into sourcing or quote prep.
Important verification notes
Use the worksheet to structure the job, then confirm the final release path against the exact product-family data and installed conditions.