RLebel
Electrical
- Feb 17, 2009
- 9
Most manufacturers advertise their breakers at 80% and in some cases 100%.
I understand the NEC rules and its intent. My question is what happens to a 80% breaker which is loaded at 100%?
Example:
A distribution panel contains a mixture of lights and receptacles. The panel load is 80A. The cable and breaker feeding the panel are rated at 100A (125% of the estimated load)
Someone plugs in an additional 20A of continuous loads in the receptacles.
The load on the breaker is now 100A.
1) Assuming the breaker is an electronic trip breaker, its characteristics curve would be unaffected by the increased heat load, meaning the 100A of loads could run continuously without tripping the breaker. Could the added heat load cause a breaker failure?
I understand the NEC rules and its intent. My question is what happens to a 80% breaker which is loaded at 100%?
Example:
A distribution panel contains a mixture of lights and receptacles. The panel load is 80A. The cable and breaker feeding the panel are rated at 100A (125% of the estimated load)
Someone plugs in an additional 20A of continuous loads in the receptacles.
The load on the breaker is now 100A.
1) Assuming the breaker is an electronic trip breaker, its characteristics curve would be unaffected by the increased heat load, meaning the 100A of loads could run continuously without tripping the breaker. Could the added heat load cause a breaker failure?