โJul-25-2013 05:11 AM
โJul-26-2013 09:15 AM
โJul-26-2013 09:02 AM
mena661 wrote:
My RV.
โJul-26-2013 09:00 AM
โJul-26-2013 08:45 AM
Bob Landry wrote:
Under your scenario, there should only be one breaker for a 30A input since the hot is protected.
โJul-26-2013 08:22 AM
โJul-26-2013 07:32 AM
LittleBill wrote:Bob Landry wrote:
Also, the reason we see so many burned neutral wires, aside from loose connections, is the wire is undersized at installation. Folks, neutral is a current carrying wire. That is why when you go to a breaker panel for a 50A systen, there are three breakers. All current carrying legs have to be protected. If you disagree, tell me where the current flows from to get to the hot wire when a device runs, it's not through ground. In a 50A circuit, the 120V is referenced to neutral. That means that at any given point in the cycle, the neutral has to carry the same amount of current as the hot leg so it has to be the same size wire. Why do you think that when you buy romex or marine wire for AC, the wires for hot(s) and neutral are the same size? It's not because it's easier to manufacture that way, it's because it's required to handle the current load.
well i guess someone had to be wrong, guess its bob
Bob, there are not 3 breakers for single phase 50amp/240v
there is no breaker for a neutral wire, there is no point since the hot side is protected
now on 3 phase 208v, there are 3 breakers but there is also another wire. i think this is where your getting confused
โJul-26-2013 07:27 AM
โJul-26-2013 07:01 AM
Bob Landry wrote:
Also, the reason we see so many burned neutral wires, aside from loose connections, is the wire is undersized at installation. Folks, neutral is a current carrying wire. That is why when you go to a breaker panel for a 50A systen, there are three breakers. All current carrying legs have to be protected. If you disagree, tell me where the current flows from to get to the hot wire when a device runs, it's not through ground. In a 50A circuit, the 120V is referenced to neutral. That means that at any given point in the cycle, the neutral has to carry the same amount of current as the hot leg so it has to be the same size wire. Why do you think that when you buy romex or marine wire for AC, the wires for hot(s) and neutral are the same size? It's not because it's easier to manufacture that way, it's because it's required to handle the current load.
โJul-26-2013 07:01 AM
Bob Landry wrote:
..That is why when you go to a breaker panel for a 50A systen, there are three breakers. All current carrying legs have to be protected. If you disagree, tell me where the current flows from to get to the hot wire when a device runs, it's not through ground...
โJul-26-2013 06:55 AM
SolidAxleDurango wrote:RVnRobin wrote:
I hadn't thought of the effect of phase. Thanks for the info.
So, is it my imagination or do we really see more burnt neutral wires than hot wires? And, why?
It's not phase... Generally all power you are exposed to (at home, and in the RV) is single phase - 3 wire.
L1 and L2 are simply 180 degrees apart on the waveform.
โJul-26-2013 05:31 AM
RVnRobin wrote:
I hadn't thought of the effect of phase. Thanks for the info.
So, is it my imagination or do we really see more burnt neutral wires than hot wires? And, why?
โJul-26-2013 04:21 AM
โJul-25-2013 08:32 AM
โJul-25-2013 07:16 AM