Apply the factors from the table above.

Write down every load’s nominal power.

Where is the Demand Factor (or Diversity Factor). Standard Demand Factors (Reference Guide) | Load Type | Typical Demand Factor | Notes | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Lighting (Office) | 0.75 – 0.90 | Fluorescent/LED | | Lighting (Warehouse) | 0.95 – 1.00 | High bay, always on | | General Power Outlets | 0.10 – 0.50 | Varies heavily by occupancy | | HVAC (Cooling) | 1.00 | Worst-case summer day | | HVAC (Heating) | 0.80 – 1.00 | Electric heat is high demand | | Lifts / Elevators | 0.40 – 0.60 | Largest motor only | | Motors (Continuous) | 1.00 | Pumps, compressors | | Motors (Intermittent) | 0.40 – 0.60 | Conveyors, cranes | | Kitchen Equipment | 0.40 – 0.70 | Not all used at once | The "Pro" Calculator Tool (Manual Method) If you don't have a power analyzer, use this systematic approach to estimate your MD.

Why average? A motor starting up might draw 600A for 2 seconds, but that doesn't melt the cables. The 15-minute average is what heats the transformer. Why does it matter? Utilities size their transformers for your MD. If you have a 5-minute spike once a month, you are paying for infrastructure you use 0.01% of the time. You cannot simply add up the nameplate ratings of all breakers. That is Connected Load , not Maximum Demand. Diversity saves you.

In the world of electrical engineering and facility management, Maximum Demand (MD) is a critical metric. It isn't just about keeping the lights on; it directly impacts your capital expenditure (cable/transformer sizing) and operational expenditure (electricity bills).

To take control of this, you need a . What is Maximum Demand? Maximum Demand is the highest average load (usually measured over 15, 30, or 60-minute intervals) that a system draws during a billing period.

Convert to kVA (PF 0.90): ( 21.1 / 0.90 = ) The "Real" Calculator: Power Analyzer / Smart Meter Manual calculations are estimates. For accurate MD (and to verify your diversity assumptions), you need real data.

In most commercial tariffs, the electricity bill is split into two parts: and Demand Charges (kVA/kW) . The Demand Charge is often the larger shock—it is based on the highest average load recorded during a billing window.