I've been given a collection of residential service panel breakers
and would like to check them to see if they trip correctly. They
were in use before I got them, so they certainly close correctly,
but it's unknown if they trip correctly.
As it happens, I have an AC arc welder which can be set between
about 20 and 200 amps, with an open circuit voltage of about 80 V.
Anybody ever tried this? Does it seem an unrealistically harsh
test?
I've been given a collection of residential service panel breakers
and would like to check them to see if they trip correctly. They
were in use before I got them, so they certainly close correctly,
but it's unknown if they trip correctly.
As it happens, I have an AC arc welder which can be set between
about 20 and 200 amps, with an open circuit voltage of about 80 V.
Anybody ever tried this? Does it seem an unrealistically harsh
test?
Thanks for reading,
bob prohaska
At least traditional welders (line frequency not switched mode) look
very inductive, and are designed to sustain an arc. Whilst I would hope
that the circuit breakers are able to break the arc, it is a much
harsher test than with a resistive load. If the welder is able to
sustain an arc after the circuit breaker opens, then this will destroy
the breaker.
Chris Jones <lugnut808@spam.yahoo.com> wrote:
At least traditional welders (line frequency not switched mode) look
very inductive, and are designed to sustain an arc. Whilst I would hope
that the circuit breakers are able to break the arc, it is a much
harsher test than with a resistive load. If the welder is able to
sustain an arc after the circuit breaker opens, then this will destroy
the breaker.
I agree it's a harsh test, but the breakers were free. I'd rather not
use them without some evidence they work.
After posting my question I again searched the web and found one set
of YouTube videos demonstrating overcurrent testing of breakers and >connectors. One suggests that at least some circuit breakers can stop
an arc welder without self-destruction. It's at >https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fhXtXVBvSfg
Thanks for writing!
bob prohaska
DC ratings of standard breakers seldom exceed 40V, due to arcing.
AC arcs are interrupted by line voltage reversal,
legg wrote:
-----------------
DC ratings of standard breakers seldom exceed 40V, due to arcing.
** However most *mains rated* breakers employ magnetic or physical barrier arc quenching whenever contacts open.
Not so much quenching, as sacrificial absorption....
legg wrote:
-----------------
DC ratings of standard breakers seldom exceed 40V, due to arcing.
** However most *mains rated* breakers employ magnetic or physical barrier arc quenching whenever contacts open.
AC arcs are interrupted by line voltage reversal,
** Strange how AC arc welders work so well then.
FYI:
Relays and most switches suffer from limited DC switching capacity, usually limited to 24 or 30 volts at rated currents.
Any more results in a permanent arc bridging the contacts, followed by complete self destruction.
Relays used as "speaker protection" generally do not.
...... Phil
Have a really rotten day.
.... Phil
legg wrote:
------------------
legg wrote:
-----------------
DC ratings of standard breakers seldom exceed 40V, due to arcing.
** However most *mains rated* breakers employ magnetic or physical barrier arc quenching whenever contacts open.
Not so much quenching, as sacrificial absorption....
** Hello to the smug troll calling itself " legg" .
The term "quenching" here clearly refers to physically breaking an arc by extending it.
Rest of your pedantic, tedious, self aggrandizing, spew inducing BULLSHIT snipped.
Have a really rotten day.
.... Phil
I've been given a collection of residential service panel breakers
and would like to check them to see if they trip correctly. They
were in use before I got them, so they certainly close correctly,
but it's unknown if they trip correctly.
On Sunday, June 4, 2023 at 9:50:55 PM UTC-4, bob prohaska wrote:
I've been given a collection of residential service panel breakers
and would like to check them to see if they trip correctly. They
were in use before I got them, so they certainly close correctly,
but it's unknown if they trip correctly.
If they're thermal breakers, the only part that can fail while retaining
the on/off function is a heater. A welder intended to melt metal
applied to a heater is... maybe not a test that should be applied.
The heater, if it fails open, won't let the breaker pass current.
If it fails closed circuit... there's extra metal inside the breaker?
Circuit breakers should, and generally do, fail in safe ways.
Go ahead and use them without applying a stress test beyond normal
currents and voltages.
Sysop: | Keyop |
---|---|
Location: | Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, UK |
Users: | 481 |
Nodes: | 16 (2 / 14) |
Uptime: | 15:59:14 |
Calls: | 9,540 |
Files: | 13,653 |
Messages: | 6,139,711 |