Panelboard in -50F Weather

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deb4523

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Alaska, USA
How much of a concern should it be about breakers functioning correctly in a panelboard in -50F weather?

I have a new project where I was also originally planning on installing the panelboard outside. We have several panelboards installed outdoors on the facility, but I am concerned about the breakers not being rated for temperatures that low. I spoke with an Eaton rep up here in Alaska. He told me I could install outside in this area if I put a heater unit in the panelboard enclosure. He said that the breakers don't open like they should at extremely cold temperatures. We are regularly below -30F throughout the winter and I've seen it drop to below -60F, but only once. We usually require things installed outdoors to be rated to -40F or -50F depending on the importance of it functioning year round.

What are your thoughts/experiences? Should I push to start modifying the panelboards that are currently installed outside for safety's sake or leave them as is. To my knowledge, there hasn't been a problem to date. :blink:

Thanks,
Debbie
 
How much of a concern should it be about breakers functioning correctly in a panelboard in -50F weather?

I have a new project where I was also originally planning on installing the panelboard outside. We have several panelboards installed outdoors on the facility, but I am concerned about the breakers not being rated for temperatures that low. I spoke with an Eaton rep up here in Alaska. He told me I could install outside in this area if I put a heater unit in the panelboard enclosure. He said that the breakers don't open like they should at extremely cold temperatures. We are regularly below -30F throughout the winter and I've seen it drop to below -60F, but only once. We usually require things installed outdoors to be rated to -40F or -50F depending on the importance of it functioning year round.

What are your thoughts/experiences? Should I push to start modifying the panelboards that are currently installed outside for safety's sake or leave them as is. To my knowledge, there hasn't been a problem to date. :blink:

Thanks,
Debbie
The conventional wisdom is to use panel heaters. Most commercially available panelboards are going to be designed for -10 through 60 deg. C operation, so that's +14 to 140F. Below -10C, the breaker may not trip when it is supposed to, meaning the protection it provides may not be there. You can get special breakers rated for low temperature operation, usually -40C (which is coincidentally also -40F) and for lower than that, a few mfrs offer "ultra-low temperature" rated breakers that go down to -50C (-58F). But these are not going to be for panelboards, they are stand-alone, and they are VERY expensive. Below that and you run into issues with lubrication of the mechanical parts freezing up and the plastic insulators fracturing.

Side note; assuming these are outdoor CIRCUITS fed by the panel and might require GFCI protection, the UL standard for GFCIs is only down to -35C (-31F) so you are pretty much screwed there.
 
Even though the breakers can operate at -10C, there is a major change in the tripping point. Squared has a chart that shows a 125 amp breaker will trip at about 175 amps in a -10C ambient.
 
Even though the breakers can operate at -10C, there is a major change in the tripping point. Squared has a chart that shows a 125 amp breaker will trip at about 175 amps in a -10C ambient.

:happyyes:

The trip curves get even more seriously skewed at the temperatures the original poster is talking about... At minus 50 degrees, a 20 amp breaker could carry somewhere in the neighborhood of 70 amps indefinitely... Tho number 12 wire in an ambient temperature of -50 would be able to carry roughly the same load without melting.

It seems to me that if practical, locating panels inside would be a better solution than panel heaters which are always drawing current, and subject to failure.

Do any manufacturers make like a double-walled enclosure with insulation between the two for extreme cold or hot applications?
 
:happyyes:

The trip curves get even more seriously skewed at the temperatures the original poster is talking about... At minus 50 degrees, a 20 amp breaker could carry somewhere in the neighborhood of 70 amps indefinitely... Tho number 12 wire in an ambient temperature of -50 would be able to carry roughly the same load without melting.

It seems to me that if practical, locating panels inside would be a better solution than panel heaters which are always drawing current, and subject to failure.

Do any manufacturers make like a double-walled enclosure with insulation between the two for extreme cold or hot applications?

Without something to heat the space up like a panel heater, no matter how well you insulated it will eventually reach whatever the ambient temperature is outside of it.
 
when (if) it does trip, who is going to draw the short straw and go outside to reset it :D
 
It is mainly for a new small booth. The wall space on the inside of the booth is quite limited, but I don't think I have an option here. Something will have to get mounted on the ceiling or something so the panel can be installed indoors... :)

Thanks everyone for the feedback!
 
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