---
### What We Need to Do:
We need to find the **equivalent power** of the motor. This is the steady power that the motor would need to operate continuously, while doing the same total work as in the cycle described.
---
### Steps to Solve:
1. **Break the cycle into parts:**
- **Ramp-up phase (0 to 150 HP in 8 minutes):**
Power increases from 0 to 150 HP. The average power during this phase is:
\[
\text{Average power} = \frac{0 + 150}{2} = 75 \, \text{HP}.
\]
The work done during this phase is:
\[
\text{Work} = \text{Average power} \times \text{Time}.
\]
Time = 8 minutes = \( \frac{8}{60} = 0.133 \, \text{hours} \), so:
\[
\text{Work} = 75 \times 0.133 = 10 \, \text{HP-hours}.
\]
- **Constant power phase (100 HP for 5 minutes):**
Power is constant at 100 HP. The work done is:
\[
\text{Work} = \text{Power} \times \text{Time}.
\]
Time = 5 minutes = \( \frac{5}{60} = 0.083 \, \text{hours} \), so:
\[
\text{Work} = 100 \times 0.083 = 8.33 \, \text{HP-hours}.
\]
- **No-load phase (0 HP for 5 minutes):**
No power is used, so:
\[
\text{Work} = 0 \, \text{HP-hours}.
\]
2. **Total work in one cycle:**
Add up the work from all phases:
\[
\text{Total work} = 10 + 8.33 + 0 = 18.33 \, \text{HP-hours}.
\]
3. **Find equivalent power:**
The cycle takes 18 minutes total, which is \( 18 / 60 = 0.3 \, \text{hours} \). The equivalent power is:
\[
\text{Equivalent power} = \frac{\text{Total work}}{\text{Total time}}.
\]
\[
\text{Equivalent power} = \frac{18.33}{0.3} = 61.1 \, \text{HP}.
\]
---
### Final Answer:
The motor should have a size of **61.1 HP**.