For the entire circuit to go out, the breaker has to trip. The breaker tripping is what causes the loss of power to everything pulling power from that circut. Any single power surge at any point along the circut can cause it. If you have experienced what you are questioning, I suggest you have an electrician take a look at your wiring. You may have serious issues. Breakers a designed to protect the wiring from getting too hot. It's a safety feature for your appliances, your home and those who live in it.
If the circuit breaker to a dryer, or to any load, keeps getting hot and trips the breaker, then either the load is pulling too much current or there is a loose connection in the breaker or breaker panel. Either condition must be fixed to reduce the risk of fire.
Ambient temperature has an effect on the tripping point of a breaker. If a breaker is operating at near capacity the additional ambient temperature will lower the breaker trip set point. As to humidity making the breaker trip easier, the answer is no. Humidity makes the ambient temperature seem hotter that the true temperature is. A standard operating temperature of breakers is from from -5 to 40 degrees C. If the breaker is used at higher temperatures than 40 degree C they have to be de rated, 50 degrees C to 90% and 60 degrees C to 70%. The standard humidity rating of a breaker is 85%. Humidity that is constantly higher than 85% will require a special tropical environment type of breaker that extends the humidity range up to 95%.
Circuit breakers are designed to automatically and manually interrupt circuits. When circuit breakers automatically actuate they are said to have 'tripped.' Also user operators can shut down circuits through individual breakers or the entire system through a master breaker.
A Miniature Circuit Breaker or "MCB" works as a normal electrical circuit breaker but is a much smaller device. As well as electro-mechanical relay technology it includes electronic circuitry to achieve its small overall size. MCBs are now used extensively for consumer power-distribution panels and inside small electrical equipment.For more information see the answers to the Related Questions and also the Related link shown below.
Your question presumes that each connected wire would be a separate circuit. They are not. However, you may place as many as 2 wires on a breaker, provided they are the same size and both either stranded or solid. Do not mix solid and stranded or different size conductors as this makes it likely that one wire will not be as tight as the other. It is better practice, and in some local jurisdictions is required, to put only one wire on the breaker, run it to a junction box outside the panel, and branch from there. It eliminates confusion and the look of poor workmanship inside the panel, and it meets the requirements of the jurisdictions that do not allow you to do otherwise. <<>> The Canadian electrical code only allows one wire to be connected under the breaker's screw termination. The reasoning for this is that the installer can keep track of the exact amount of devices on the circuit and what section of the home the circuit services. A good reason to keep the breaker to one circuit is when trouble shooting the circuit, two circuits are not disconnected when the breaker is shut off.
A circuit breaker can go bad from being tripped too many times. Many people don't understand that the tripping of a circuit breaker indicates a problem that needs to be corrected. They usually just reset the circuit breaker, leading to a very common second (or third, or fourth) trip. Circuit breakers tripping are for the prevention of fire due to excessive heat in the circuit. They're not supposed to be tripped repeatedly. This can wear the breaker out. Believe it or not, I've also seen circuit breakers fail to re-energize after being turned off. I speculate this was actually caused by the breaker never having been cycled (it was a main breaker), and the time elapsed since it was installed. Electrical equipment doesn't last forever. It's the same as anything else.
the breaker makes sure that nothing in the circuit is damaged by an increased amount of amperage or voltage
What is a fitness circuit? a fitness circuit is were it makes u fit and healthy. Is a circuit breaker a circuit? No, it is an inherent part of the circuit. In simple terms and condtion
Typically yes because that is what makes sense. However, the subpanel could have the same size breaker as long as the panel were rated for that amperage and the wire sizes were appropriate.
Repairing circuit breakers is not advisable. When a breaker is taken apart there are many parts that have to specifically align up with each other. Any misalignment and the breaker may not operate correctly if subjected to a fault condition. Do like the landlubbers do and replace the faulty breaker with a new one. This makes everyone safe.
If the circuit breaker to a dryer, or to any load, keeps getting hot and trips the breaker, then either the load is pulling too much current or there is a loose connection in the breaker or breaker panel. Either condition must be fixed to reduce the risk of fire.
There is a heated bimetallic strip that provides a time delay small overload protection. When its contact makes, it energizes a coil to trip the breaker. Some breakers are mechanical, though. There is a coil that trips the breaker instantly on large overload.
Ambient temperature has an effect on the tripping point of a breaker. If a breaker is operating at near capacity the additional ambient temperature will lower the breaker trip set point. As to humidity making the breaker trip easier, the answer is no. Humidity makes the ambient temperature seem hotter that the true temperature is. A standard operating temperature of breakers is from from -5 to 40 degrees C. If the breaker is used at higher temperatures than 40 degree C they have to be de rated, 50 degrees C to 90% and 60 degrees C to 70%. The standard humidity rating of a breaker is 85%. Humidity that is constantly higher than 85% will require a special tropical environment type of breaker that extends the humidity range up to 95%.
A circuit breaker is a safety device that is put in an electrical circuit. When something fails, or shorts out, the circuit breaker "senses" the excessive current and automatically opens (or breaks) the circuit. They are used in homes, as well as some electrical devices. They are different than a fuse in that a circuit breaker can be reset. A fuse on the other hand, has to be replaced once it opens up. I hope this helps you. for more info, here is a web page about circuit breakers: <a href="http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-a-circuit-breaker.htm">Ciruit breakers</a>
There are several type of circuit breakers now a day we are using these are as follows: 1. M.C.B. (Miniature circuit Breaker) Rating : 1, 2, 4, 6, 10, 16, 20, 25, 32, 63 Amperes 2. M.C.C.B. (Miniature current circuit Breaker) Rating : 10, 16, 20, 25, 32, 63, 100, 200, 250, 400 Amperes. 3. A.C.B. (Air Circuit Breaker) Rating : 400, 800, 1000, 1200, 1500, 1800, 2000 Amperes. 4. A. B. Switch (Air Breaker) used in High tension line. 5. SF6 Breaker (Contact break in the Sf6 medium) used in High tension line.
Unlike other electric circuits in your vehicle, headlights circuits are protected by a circuit breaker. Just about everything else is protected by a fuse.Circuit breakers reset themselves automatically once they cool.So there are only two possibilities for the condition you describe:The circuit could be overloaded; that could be caused by a non-standard light or other device on the circuit or an outright short circuit to ground.It's also possible that the circuit breaker has failed.
Does anyone know what brand breaker replaces a Gould breaker???