One of my clients in my former life specified that EVERY 3-pole molded case circuit breaker be tested during his three-year maintenance. As a testing contractor, I thought this overkill, but he's the client and hours are hours. We tested them all - literally dozens from a major production unit shutdown, both thermal-magnetic and magnetic-only.
to test the thermal response, we connected the three poles in series and did one shot at 300% from a cold (ambient) breaker, comparing the time with the manufacturer's curve if available, or lacking the manufacturer's curve, the table found in the ANSI/NETA Maintenance Test Specification. Attempts to do single-phase testing of the thermal characteristic require a long cooling period as the heat from one phase 'bleeds' over to the next, pre-heating it and distorting results.
We tested the magnetic characteristic by starting test current at about 70% of nominal rating and increasing it until trip. These were single-phase tests.
Manufacturers will rapidly tell you that a +40 -30% tolerance is the best that can be expected for integral trip units. If the breaker has an electronic trip unit, greater accuracy can be expected.
It was common to find that 10% of the tested breakers failed these tests. These were usually the smaller ratings - <100A nominal.
My present concern, since I am no longer the testing agent, but the owner, is that removing bolted-in molded case breakers for testing introduces a greater exposure for failure upon re-installation due to having to re-install conductors and bolted connections, as well as which breakers should be 'tested' to meet NFPA 70E's requirement that overcurrent protective devices must be 'maintained' in order to validate the findings of an arc-flash study.
old field guy