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AJJewsbury:Am I correct to say that even at maximum allowable EFLIs, breakers 100 amps and under will trip in their magnetic region?
Not entirely - BS 7671 allows higher EFLIs for D types - e.g. 0.68Ω (table 41.3) for a D32 for 5s disconnection time - so minimum fault current of around 338A - yet 20xIn (640A) is needed to ensure magnetic operation.
A 60 amp circuit still going to tax the source.
Not much I would have thought - Max Zs for a 63A BS 88-3 fuse is 0.68Ω for 5s disconnection time - so again minimum fault current of 300-odd amps. Given that most public supply transformers in urban areas are rated at 400A or more per phase, in unfavourable conditions it wouldn't even count as an overload.
- Andy.
Do have some time current curves for D types? You're right, but I just want to compare curves.
How often do these values actually approach 0.68ohms?
AJJewsbury:Am I correct to say that even at maximum allowable EFLIs, breakers 100 amps and under will trip in their magnetic region?
Not entirely - BS 7671 allows higher EFLIs for D types - e.g. 0.68Ω (table 41.3) for a D32 for 5s disconnection time - so minimum fault current of around 338A - yet 20xIn (640A) is needed to ensure magnetic operation.
A 60 amp circuit still going to tax the source.
Not much I would have thought - Max Zs for a 63A BS 88-3 fuse is 0.68Ω for 5s disconnection time - so again minimum fault current of 300-odd amps. Given that most public supply transformers in urban areas are rated at 400A or more per phase, in unfavourable conditions it wouldn't even count as an overload.
- Andy.
Do have some time current curves for D types? You're right, but I just want to compare curves.
How often do these values actually approach 0.68ohms?
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