kjd
Electrical
- Mar 22, 2002
- 4
Why is it that a circuit breaker can interrupt thousands of amps of fault current, but not a few dozen amps of charging current? I understand that charging current - which is capacitive and more or less 90 degrees out of phase with load current - can arc across circuit breaker contacts. But the current is sooooooo much lower than load or fault current, that I just can't see how 50 amps or so can damage a circuit breaker which is capable of interrupting 20,000 amps of fault current at 69 or 115 kV.
Can anybody enlighten me?
Thanks much!
Kevin
Can anybody enlighten me?
Thanks much!
Kevin