Thank you for the reply. It is for a Cutler Hammer panel. I ordered a 2-pole 60 amp breaker and this is what they sent. It is a 2-pole breaker, but it has 30 amps on one pole and 60 on the other. The only use I can think of would be for something that needs 2 different 120 volt loads that would share a neutral. Something like a machine with two different size motors.It would help if we saw the configuration of the back, but the tan handle suggests that it could be a Cutler-Hammer classic circuit breaker.
I agree.But I'm leaning toward 'oopsie' on the unmatched pole rating numbers.
Those both have the same size lugs, so my guess is that the breakers are of the same rating, but one just has the wrong handle.
Unless it’s supplying two 120V loads, one on a 30A circuit and the other on a 60A. But I don’t think I’ve ever seen a 120V, 60A load.Well if one side is actually 30A and given the fact it's common trip it would never carry a 60 amp load period.![]()
In that case there's no reason for a two pole breaker.Unless it’s supplying two 120V loads, one on a 30A circuit and the other on a 60A. But I don’t think I’ve ever seen a 120V, 60A load.
Think I've seen some Siemens posted as well.I've seen these things posted several times over the years, most seem to be Eatons. It's a mistake.
But 40 years ago I touched a 3 pole QO with 2 plug-on and 1 bolt-on connections. And, that was back when plug-on and bolt-on used different panels.Won't see that with a QO breaker as they have a single handle and internal tie to the other pole(s)
Makes me wonder if there are also a bunch of single pole breakers out there in the wild with the wrong rating on the handles.I've seen these things posted several times over the years, most seem to be Eatons. It's a mistake.
Very much this.Makes me wonder if there are also a bunch of single pole breakers out there in the wild with the wrong rating on the handles.
If those were not double poles, nobody would ever know.
I disagree. Maybe not the best "interlock", but if the 30 amp is supplying the air handler of an HVAC system, and the 60 amp is supplying the compressor, tripping the 30 amp would make it prudent to kill the compressor, too. Otherwise, the coils in the air handler may freeze and burst. If the 60 trips, shutting down the air handler makes the failure obvious to the humans involved.In that case there's no reason for a two pole breaker.![]()
