depends on the product, which you are using
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with some electrical lingo! So, like, the Ampere Frame of a circuit breaker is basically the maximum continuous current it can carry without tripping, while the Ampere Trip is the current level at which the breaker will actually trip and shut off the circuit. Think of it like the frame being the "I can handle this much" and the trip being the "Okay, now I'm outta here" moment for the breaker.
The "AF" stands for the Frame Ampere rating, so in this case will be 400 Amp Frame. The "AT" stands for Trip Ampere rating, and in this question will be 300 Amp Trip.
The ampere frame rating for a circuit breaker designates how the circuit breaker should be configured. It also states the trip unit of the amp.
AF refers to the ampere rating of the breaker frame and AT refers to the breaker trip rating in amps. These are not breakers that you would find in your home but industrial molded case breakers. The current trips can be changed out to different values all within the same frame size.
250AF refers to the ampere rating of the breaker frame and 200AT refers to the breaker trip rating in amps. These are not breakers that you would find in your home but industrial molded case breakers. The current trips can be changed out to different values all within the same frame size.
120/300 = 2/5 = 0.4 = 40% Thus,40% of students are going on the trip.
AF refers to the ampere rating of the breaker frame and AT refers to the breaker trip rating in amps. These are not breakers that you would find in your home but industrial molded case breakers. The current trips can be changed out to different values all within the same frame size
50 miles
ampere is the unit in all the systems for electric current
An ampere trip is a protection feature in an electrical circuit breaker that automatically shuts off the flow of electricity when the current exceeds a certain level, typically to prevent overheating or damage to the circuit. When the amperage reaches a specified threshold, the circuit breaker trips to interrupt the current flow and protect the circuit from potential hazards.
The unit for measuring current is the ampere, symbolized as A.
in the fuse box under the hood hood, next to the battery. It is a 40 ampere fuse