IEC motor starters for industrial trash compactors — current-rated contactors with integrated thermal overload protection. The modern global industrial standard, used on most post-2010 commercial and industrial compactors. Drop-in replacements with OEM-equivalent specifications.
IEC motor starters are sized by current rating in amps (rather than NEMA's size categories). The most common IEC contactors for compactor service are rated 9A, 12A, 18A, 25A, 32A, and 40A — covering the inrush and continuous current ranges for 5-25HP motors at standard voltages.
IEC starters are physically smaller than equivalent NEMA starters and cost less, which is why they've become the global industrial standard. Major brands (Schneider TeSys, Siemens Sirius, ABB AF, Allen Bradley 100-C) all manufacture IEC starters; PRT stocks compatible replacements for all common compactor applications.
Match by current rating in amps (not NEMA size), control coil voltage (typically 24V DC or 120V AC for modern compactors), and thermal overload current setting (set to the motor's full-load amps).
IEC starters are not directly interchangeable with NEMA — different mounting pattern, different terminal layout, different overload format. If you're converting from NEMA to IEC, plan for a control-panel rebuild.
Match the contactor current rating to the motor's full-load amps (FLA) at the building's voltage. A 10HP motor at 480V draws 14A FLA — order a 25A IEC contactor for headroom. PRT customer service can recommend based on motor specs.
Mounting and terminal layouts are similar but not identical. PRT contactors fit the most common Marathon, PTR, Wastequip control-panel mounting patterns; verify with your existing panel layout.
Smaller physical size, lower copper content, and global manufacturing scale. IEC has become the dominant global standard. NEMA still exists for legacy installations and certain heavy-industrial applications.
Usually yes — the overload relay is a separate snap-on or screw-on module. If both are the same brand, the overload relay snaps onto the new contactor. Mixed-brand replacement may require both pieces.