K8MHZ
Senior Member
- Occupation
- Electrician
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It might never open the circuit...the listing standard permits both breakers and fuses to carry 134% of their rating forever. They are both required to open the circuit in 60 minutes or less with a current of 135% of their rating.Trust me, a 15 amp breaker will not trip for quite some time with 18 amps going through it. Remember we have trip curves to deal with.
It is not as simple as that. Any breaker may be able to sustain a constant current above its rating without ever tripping. The higher the current, the faster the trip. The closer the overload gets to the breaker's rating, the longer it takes to trip. How much of an overload a breaker can handle without tripping depends on the breaker's physical characteristics.
It might never open the circuit...the listing standard permits both breakers and fuses to carry 134% of their rating forever. They are both required to open the circuit in 60 minutes or less with a current of 135% of their rating.
Mebbe I'll stop by the local thrift store and drop a couple bucks on a used toaster and push 240v through it.
I will try one more time.
Consider this a FIXED resistor. You guys are inserting too much information in this example.
The math has been done. The breaker would trip.
That is not what the problem was to solve. It's when electricians start thinking when the voltage goes up, current goes down. You will see this if you have a dual rated irrigation pump motor. A guy will hook up an irrigation motor from 120 to 240. He sees the voltage has risen but the current has dropped. It gets in his head without thinking he changed the straps before he doubles the voltage, hence, changing the resistance. This is a fixed resistor for this example. Also, forget about the heat and change in the value of this resistor.......... It's 14.4 ohms, period at 120 volts.
No math guy would EVER get this wrong. It's the guy in the field that has been an electrician all his life. They are the first to say, the current will drop in half and the breaker will not trip.
As I said in my first post, most seasoned electricians will get this wrong. The math guys, never.
Try it on a guy that's been in the field for a long time, you will see, he will get it wrong most of the time until he thinks about it and then does the math.
I have actually changed this resistor to an incandescent light bulb. They still get it wrong! Now that is amazing to see that. We use the toaster as stealth. The light bulb should be obvious.
Thanks for the comments. This is how we think and reason and continue to learn...
I am a math guy and here is the problem.
If a perfect device was used, the trip curve would allow 18 amps to flow through a 15 amp breaker for 60 seconds. So one answer would be 'eventually'.
If a device was used that was on the limits of tolerance, 15 x 1.34 = 20.1, so in that case the answer would be 'no, the device would not trip'.
If you are insinuating that the fuse or breaker would open as soon as the 18 amp load is connected, I will have to argue that and bet it wouldn't happen.
So, the thing to do is to actually connect a toaster line to line and see what happens.
This problem is to see if an electrician would think the current would drop. I give up on this one but it was fun. I was looking for pics on my GR2000 Heathkit TV, K8MHZ. Do you have any pics building Heathkits? Let's post a couple.
As what you call a seasoned electrician (45 years plus), I believe your generalization is incorrect, unless you have quizzed a good-sized sampling and documented their responses. I could see rookie helpers getting this wrong, but not someone who has had a decent variety of electrical work experience over the years.No math guy would EVER get this wrong. It's the guy in the field that has been an electrician all his life. They are the first to say, the current will drop in half and the breaker will not trip.
As I said in my first post, most seasoned electricians will get this wrong. The math guys, never.
Try it on a guy that's been in the field for a long time, you will see, he will get it wrong most of the time until he thinks about it and then does the math.
This conversation reminds me of a similar question to ask of an electrician. Will a dual voltage motor use more power at the low or the high voltage? Sadly, many "electricians" respond along the lines of "of course the lower voltage, just look, the current is double. It will cost twice as much to run"
It's a math problem.
But, it also is a way of looking at the circuit. When do electricians get this wrong without thinking? They think, if the voltage goes up, the current goes down. They are thinking about transformers or pool pump motors that they are switching from 120 to 240. That is why an electrician will get this wrong. Then, simple math will tell them if the current is higher than the breaker or not.
Don't try to work the problem past simple math. Do the math, period. Whatever the math says, that will determine if the breaker will trip or not. Electricians don't do the math on the spot, they think first and work the problem later. It is what gets them in trouble.
As what you call a seasoned electrician (45 years plus), I believe your generalization is incorrect, unless you have quizzed a good-sized sampling and documented their responses. I could see rookie helpers getting this wrong, but not someone who has had a decent variety of electrical work experience over the years.
I believe that most electricians do understand the difference between adapting, adjusting, or modifying a piece of equipment to receive a different voltage and merely applying a different voltage without making any changes to it. Dual-voltage transformers, for example, require field wiring to match the supply.
We consider motors to be the main exception. A resistive load is a constant-impedance load whose current varies with the voltage, but a motor is a constant-power load whose current varies inversely with the voltage - within a designed range, of course. We know whether we selected a voltage during installation.
Now, as to your specific question, you asked whether the fuse would blow when the applied voltage was doubled, hoping for a simple yes or no answer. As you see, it's not that simple a question. We strove to answer your question, as it was asked, accurately. I believe you should have phrased it differently.
What you should have asked, now that we know where you were headed, was simply whether the current would increase or decrease, or double or halve. In my opinion, at least in this forum, you would have received a great number of correct answers; the answers you did receive should show you that.
As what you call a seasoned electrician (45 years plus), I believe your generalization is incorrect, unless you have quizzed a good-sized sampling and documented their responses. I could see rookie helpers getting this wrong, but not someone who has had a decent variety of electrical work experience over the years.
I believe that most electricians do understand the difference between adapting, adjusting, or modifying a piece of equipment to receive a different voltage and merely applying a different voltage without making any changes to it. Dual-voltage transformers, for example, require field wiring to match the supply.
We consider motors to be the main exception. A resistive load is a constant-impedance load whose current varies with the voltage, but a motor is a constant-power load whose current varies inversely with the voltage - within a designed range, of course. We know whether we selected a voltage during installation.
Now, as to your specific question, you asked whether the fuse would blow when the applied voltage was doubled, hoping for a simple yes or no answer. As you see, it's not that simple a question. We strove to answer your question, as it was asked, accurately. I believe you should have phrased it differently.
What you should have asked, now that we know where you were headed, was simply whether the current would increase or decrease, or double or halve. In my opinion, at least in this forum, you would have received a great number of correct answers; the answers you did receive should show you that.
Yes, generalizations. Ask a couple and see for yourself. No matter how you word a problem to an electrician, he will always go off on a tangent. That makes us human... This thread is a prime example of that. We are all in our own reality world. Everyone has a bias as they see through their lens of life. This thread shows that at its finest.
This problem came from first-year apprentice class. I didn't make it up... But, could you imagine the teacher seeing all the answers above? He would have the doggy head cock...
A good teacher would then realize that this is a bad question and would fix it. Either by change or omission.
I have actually changed this resistor to an incandescent light bulb. They still get it wrong! Now that is amazing to see that. We use the toaster as stealth. The light bulb should be obvious.