3 Phase Breaker

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When a panel is fed through a 3 phase breaker and one of the phases is higher than the rated current does the breaker trip.
All of your questions appear to be homework or study questions, is this the case?

Roger
 
When a panel is fed through a 3 phase breaker and one of the phases is higher than the rated current does the breaker trip.
Common breakers are "inverse time" rather than "instantaneous trip" type. They will trip on overcurrent, but how long and if it in fact does varies with the amount of time and level of overcurrent. Google "breaker time curves".
 
Each pole of a breaker has its own current sensing device, so each one, or rather any one, can initialed a trip by releasing the trip mechanism. All poles will open even if only one caused the trip. In fact, you could say that it is ALWAYS only one that causes the trip, because it is virtually impossible for more than one pole to carry the absolute exact same amount of current.
 
In fact, you could say that it is ALWAYS only one that causes the trip, because it is virtually impossible for more than one pole to carry the absolute exact same amount of current.
Not to mention that it is impossible to make all the trip points precisely equal.
So even on a phase-to-phase load/fault, one phase's trip mechanism will fire first, but all the poles should open simultaneously.
 
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