The 30A 2 pole QO series Square D breaker supplies 240V to 2 separate pieces of equipment. The third phase is Grounded B. Both pieces of equipment aren't supposed to run independently, but this rule is routinely disregarded in real life. One is run by the 3-phase, 3Hp motor. It draws 5A during operation. The second is run by 3-phase 10Hp motor. It draws 9A during operation, so the combined running current is 14A.
Can the customer use the breaker to start both motors in the morning and turn them off by the end of the day? It will be one on-off cycle per day. I don't want to bother the esteemed members of this forum with all details of this strange setup, but I will provide them upon request.
I exchanged e-mails with Square D engineer. He told that based on the trip curves and UL489 endurance test, the breaker should handle inrush currents and 6,000 on-off operations. My last question for him was, "Since AC motor is an inductive load, can arcing when the circuit is interrupted damage the breaker's contacts in the long run?" I still haven't received an answer.
What do you think?
Can the customer use the breaker to start both motors in the morning and turn them off by the end of the day? It will be one on-off cycle per day. I don't want to bother the esteemed members of this forum with all details of this strange setup, but I will provide them upon request.
I exchanged e-mails with Square D engineer. He told that based on the trip curves and UL489 endurance test, the breaker should handle inrush currents and 6,000 on-off operations. My last question for him was, "Since AC motor is an inductive load, can arcing when the circuit is interrupted damage the breaker's contacts in the long run?" I still haven't received an answer.
What do you think?