zog
Senior Member
- Location
- Charlotte, NC
I don't see it that way. Let's say you have a 480V 400A MCCB with a 30kA AIC.
When UL refers to a rated AIC fault they are talking about something close to that 30kA as a fault that it is designed and tested to interupt twice.
When you do the INST trip test you are appling a controlled current right at the INST pick up. So for that 400A breaker you are only injecting something in the range of 4x-10x of the frame size. 1600A-4000A for that 400A breaker. Nowhere near the AIC rating. And, the test voltage is only a few volts, not 480V, so even less energy being interupted.
1600A-4000A at around 5V is not the same as 30,000A at 480V as this breaker could possible see during an inservice short circuit event.
When UL refers to a rated AIC fault they are talking about something close to that 30kA as a fault that it is designed and tested to interupt twice.
When you do the INST trip test you are appling a controlled current right at the INST pick up. So for that 400A breaker you are only injecting something in the range of 4x-10x of the frame size. 1600A-4000A for that 400A breaker. Nowhere near the AIC rating. And, the test voltage is only a few volts, not 480V, so even less energy being interupted.
1600A-4000A at around 5V is not the same as 30,000A at 480V as this breaker could possible see during an inservice short circuit event.