robbm
Electrical
- Nov 2, 2005
- 56
I was having a discussion recently and wanted to see if I could get some clarification/opinion on a suggestion I received recently.
We have an issue with a 3phase electric heater that is wired in the head and the lack of space has caused the leads to break off and touch the housing sometimes, causing that leg to short. The breakers trip eventually, but not before the the one heating element on that individual leg is entirely fried and the whole unit needs replacing (we're also working on preventing the leads from breaking off, touching the housing, and shorting). Someone suggested that with just 1 leg shorting (and not all 3) that the 3pole molded case breaker is tripping off an RMS average of the current across all 3 legs and causing the unit not to trip soon enough to prevent damage. As a resolution, he was telling me that using (3) 1pole units would cause the individual breaker for the shorted leg to trip quicker since it is only sensing that leg, similar to using (3) fuses.
Any thoughts, is he correct or just spouting thoughts out of thin air?
We have an issue with a 3phase electric heater that is wired in the head and the lack of space has caused the leads to break off and touch the housing sometimes, causing that leg to short. The breakers trip eventually, but not before the the one heating element on that individual leg is entirely fried and the whole unit needs replacing (we're also working on preventing the leads from breaking off, touching the housing, and shorting). Someone suggested that with just 1 leg shorting (and not all 3) that the 3pole molded case breaker is tripping off an RMS average of the current across all 3 legs and causing the unit not to trip soon enough to prevent damage. As a resolution, he was telling me that using (3) 1pole units would cause the individual breaker for the shorted leg to trip quicker since it is only sensing that leg, similar to using (3) fuses.
Any thoughts, is he correct or just spouting thoughts out of thin air?