โNov-13-2015 05:18 AM
Goodson Engineering wrote:
The first (and most common) misconception is that a breaker trips when its nameplate rating is exceeded. One fire text has stated (incorrectly) that a circuit breaker will trip in several minutes with a small increase in current over its rating[1]. Actually, a 20 amp breaker must trip at a sustained current of 27 amperes (135 percent) at less than one hour, and at 40 amperes (200 percent of wire rating) in less than 120 secondsโfar different from what the cited text implies. These two trip points (135 percent and 200 percent) are defined in NEMA Standard AB-1, MCCBs and Molded Case Switches[2]
โNov-14-2015 10:36 AM
kellertx5er wrote:A better question is, what is the ampere rating per the NEC of your typical 10/3 cord used as an RV shore cord? Or a 6/4 cord used in 50 amp service for RV's?
Many myths and electrical misinformation posted in here. My first ever post addressed the myth that "circuit breakers trip at 80% of rating." Depending on any of many factors (age, temp, mfg., etc etc) a breaker could trip at 10% or never trip at all. The misinformation gets even worse when discussing conductor loading and ratings. Any breaker in reasonably good condition should easily carry 100% of its rating continuously at temps <= 104 F.
Pop quiz: according to the NEC, what is the ampere rating for #10 type THHN conductor (<=3 conductors in raceway, ambient temperature 86 deg F)?
a) 25A
b) 30A
c) 35A
d) 40A
โNov-14-2015 09:18 AM
ChooChooMan74 wrote:kellertx5er wrote:
Many myths and electrical misinformation posted in here. My first ever post addressed the myth that "circuit breakers trip at 80% of rating." Depending on any of many factors (age, temp, mfg., etc etc) a breaker could trip at 10% or never trip at all. The misinformation gets even worse when discussing conductor loading and ratings. Any breaker in reasonably good condition should easily carry 100% of its rating continuously at temps <= 104 F.
Pop quiz: according to the NEC, what is the ampere rating for #10 type THHN conductor (<=3 conductors in raceway, ambient temperature 86 deg F)?
a) 25A
b) 30A
c) 35A
d) 40A
Just looked it up. THHN says 40 Amps #10. Is that the new wiring standard? THHN wire? I am trying to find out what the TW UF wires are, that are rated for 30 Amps at #10.
โNov-13-2015 03:05 PM
โNov-13-2015 02:49 PM
MOD Idea: Put a separate 20 amp into the camper for purposes of running 2 heaters. I know some have done it for a 2nd AC on a 30 amp unit before.
โNov-13-2015 01:53 PM
pianotuna wrote:PianoTuna, I think I will do that, also. At least the ones I use high amperage devices on like the heater or coffee maker (Thinking about getting rid of that, too, and just perking coffee on the stove)
Hi,
It behooves you to replace that "standard" outlet with something sturdier than the "stab" type connectors that may exist in most RV's. I've replaced all of mine except for one.
If there is a 30 amp service for continuous loads it may be best to run at 80% of that capacity (24 amps). Assuming 120 volts that allows 2880 watts for all loads.
It is good practise to check all devices in an RV for wattage using a kill-a-watt meter or similar device. The name plate wattage is approximate on every device I have checked.
I have three shore cords now. The OEM 30, a 20 and a 15 amp.ChooChooMan74 wrote:
I brought 2 electric heaters with me. I plugged one into a regular wall outlet
โNov-13-2015 01:52 PM
kellertx5er wrote:
Many myths and electrical misinformation posted in here. My first ever post addressed the myth that "circuit breakers trip at 80% of rating." Depending on any of many factors (age, temp, mfg., etc etc) a breaker could trip at 10% or never trip at all. The misinformation gets even worse when discussing conductor loading and ratings. Any breaker in reasonably good condition should easily carry 100% of its rating continuously at temps <= 104 F.
Pop quiz: according to the NEC, what is the ampere rating for #10 type THHN conductor (<=3 conductors in raceway, ambient temperature 86 deg F)?
a) 25A
b) 30A
c) 35A
d) 40A
โNov-13-2015 01:37 PM
ChooChooMan74 wrote:
I brought 2 electric heaters with me. I plugged one into a regular wall outlet
โNov-13-2015 11:10 AM
road-runner wrote:
The breaker's thermal overload trip current is specified at 104 degrees F and is greater when the temperature is lower, which would be case when wanting to run a heater. The following document has current vs. temperature graphs on page 6, and the complete trip curves starting on page 19.
http://www.schneider-electric.com.mx/documents/local/qo.pdf
โNov-13-2015 11:06 AM
โNov-13-2015 09:58 AM
โNov-13-2015 08:55 AM
โNov-13-2015 06:48 AM
โNov-13-2015 06:09 AM