Re: Series rated system question
I want to make it clear that I am not an engineer but I work with engineers that I trust. I also work with several engineers on Code Making Panel 10 that I trust as well. Vince Saporita is one of those, he is Vice President of Technology Sales and Services for Bussmann. I asked Vince about this and this is his reply:
"The current-limiting action of a current-limiting fuse or current-limiting circuit breaker can be taken to the bank. The let-through current will never exceed that value found from the let-through charts, no matter what device is downstream, whether the downstream device exhibits dynamic impedance in the first 1/2 cycle or whether it is totally passive. Take a minute and look at the let-through chart for a current-limiting fuse or a current-limiting circuit breaker. As long as the short-circuit current is less (goes to the left on the x-axis), both the peak let-through current and the RMS let-through current is also less. No matter how much the short-circuit current is decreased by the dynamic impedance of a downstream device, the let-through current is also decreased. It is Ohm's law. If the impedance is increased (because of the dynamic impedance of a downstream device), the current is decreased. I am amazed by the statements that try to say that the dynamic impedance created by the downstream device will actually cause the fuse to let-through more short-circuit current. That's trying to violate Ohm's law.
As for the TVSS short-circuit current rating, it will most generally have been short-circuit tested with a specific line-side overcurrent protective device, many times with a current-limiting fuse. If that is the case, the TVSS device can then only be applied where the available short-circuit current is equal to or less than the TVSS's short-circuit current rating. You can't use the current-limiting ability of more than one device at a time, and the first one is the one that was used to give the TVSS device its short-circuit current rating. Now, if the TVSS device's short-circuit current rating is not based upon a particular upstream overcurrent protective device, then the let-through chart may be utilized to determine if the device is being utilized within its short-circuit current rating. For example, if any passive device is rated for 5,000 amperes for three cycles, and the available short-circuit current is 25,000 amperes, a check of the let-through chart might show that the let-through current is 4,000 amperes. That would be a good application. If the let-through were 6,000 amperes, it would not pass.
As for the new Code allowance for series rated circuit breakers, let-through currents can easily be utilized by professional engineers for existing installations where the downstream device is a power (air frame) circuit breaker that takes 3 cycles to open (no dynamic impedance in the first 1/2 cycle). There are no currently acceptable methods to engineer an up-over-and-down series rating for molded case circuit breakers that exhibit dynamic impedance during the first 1/2 cycle. The circuit breaker and fuse manufacturers are in agreement over this. However, there are other engineering calculations that can be made by the consulting engineer for existing installations. For example the engineer might evaluate an existing underrated series rated system for use with specific commercially available current-limiting fuses. (All recognized combinations of series rated fuse-breaker combinations have been tested with special umbrella limiters that must let-through more I squared t and peak current than the UL standards allow. That way, in the field, it doesn't matter which manufacturer's fuses are utilized. They will always be better than the ones with which the circuit breakers were tested.) When real, commercially available fuses are utilized, they will be much more current-limiting than the umbrella limiters. Or, the engineer might witness testing of exactly the same breakers at commercial high current labs. Or, the engineer might hire any number of testing laboratories that would test the desired combination to the UL 489 requirements."
I edited this to put Vince's actual title into the post. If you want to know about some of the papers he has done, put "Vince Saporita" or "Vincent J. Saporita" in the Google search engine.
[ October 11, 2004, 08:19 AM: Message edited by: charlie ]