76nemo
Senior Member
- Location
- Ogdensburg, NY
Ronald, don't you steal my title. I never thought of dumbest. You are stealing the wind under my wings. You are not playing fair:wink:
ronaldrc said:Ok then Certified Dumb
Winnie that make more sense to me than any thing I have heard tonight.
You think we are talking about a signal in the milliamps or possibily amps.
I need to go back over the literature.
76nemo said:Now back to winnie, are you saying you have heard of breaking from line side problems???
winnie said:I think that I see a bit of what is causing the confusion here, and this is something that I know from published literature.
The 'signal' that the AFCI is seeing is not some sort of radiated high frequency noise, such as you might get on an AM radio from a spark gap transmitter. The signal that the AFCI is looking at and analyzing is the current that actually flows through the breaker to the branch circuit.
Okay, back to surmising rather than knowning
A fault on another branch circuit in the same panelboard won't change the current flowing through the AFCI, and so should not have an effect on it.
If there is no current flow through the AFCI, say because there is no connected load, then nothing upstream of the AFCI should trip it.
But if there is sufficient current flowing through a load, and something upstream of the AFCI causes the load current to have an 'arc signature', then how could the AFCI tell where the arc is? The AFCI sees current flowing through it, and that current flow is distorted in the fashion caused by an arc, and it doesn't matter where that arc is. The key is that the arc current flows _through_ the AFCI.
Now I suppose that it is possible that any given AFCI will be subject to interference, and could in an _untended_ fashion detect signals from other circuits. Key a transmitter near many devices, and they will likely malfunction. I don't doubt that AFCIs are similarly sensitive to outside interference. But this would not be correct function.
-Jon
Seems like I saw a test video not too long ago (Eaton, maybe), where they simulated this series arc with carbon rods in the circuit being drawn apart. I can usually put my hands on neat links like that, but I can't for the life of me remember where I saw it at. I want to say arcfault.org, but I can't find it there.Dennis Alwon said:Does anyone know how long it takes for an arc fault to trip with a series arc. I did a very crude experiment by cutting the hot conductor to make a series arc. I plugged in the shop vac and although it was arcing it did not trip. Yes I was using the new combo unit. Is it not possible to create this fault as I tried?
don_resqcapt19 said:Dennis,
What was the load current? The AFCI does not look for the arc signature unless the current exceeds 5 amps for the combination device or 75 amps for the original device.
No, I don't think that means that an arc with less than 5 amps is safe....I think it means that they can tell the difference between a normal arc and a "bad" arc when the current level is below 5 amps.Dennis Alwon said:Thanks Don-- not sure what the shop vac draws. I will try a larger load.
So what good is AFCI it if the arc is there but less than 5 amps. Does that mean that a 5amp arc is not a safety issue?
gar:gar said:081008-2032 EST
There may be more effective ways to solve the problem --- such as ---
Better quality devices, require screw compressive connections, good contact material with good fatigue life.
Use copper wire.
Require impedance testing.
Require double checking by an independent person from the installer.
Require higher quality devices that plug into receptacles.
.
gar said: