joepower
Electrical
- Jan 30, 2003
- 14
Molded case breakers in motor control centers are often operated indirectly by an external handle on the front of the MCC cubicle. As the mechanical linkages wear over time and the original circuit breakers are replaced with breakers that are not dimensionally identical, how do you ensure personnel safety by verifying that an external handle flipped to "off" has actually toggled the breaker to "off" and equipment is safe to work on? We presently have a technician open the door and check the load side of the breaker with a meter to ensure that it is de-energized, however, this is not a good place to be putting a meter since most breakers in combination starters are not rated to interrupt a fault at the load side of the breaker – you need to be on the load side of the contactor to match the way the device is tested for its certification. Also, one of the other threads at this web site indicated that they had molded case circuit breaker failures where the actual circuit breaker handle was toggled to "off", but the internal breaker mechanism did not move and the load side was still "hot" - is this a common occurrence? Thanks