Royal Enfield, a motorcycle company based in India, used the tagline "What's your trip?" in its advertisements. Nuovo, a line of VIP Luggage, also uses the tagline "What's your trip?"
dispute between pakistan and india causes ceasefire line in kashmir.
A circuit breaker is dual function. The only time it will trip is if it senses a fault current that is rated higher than the breaker rating (short circuit). The other trip condition is if the circuit is overloaded and is drawing a current higher than the breaker rating. On breakers that protect motor feeders the breaker has to be rated 250% higher than the motors full load amperage. If the breaker has lots of use and is used for a switch being manually turned off and on will weaken the trip value of the breaker. If you have access to, or know an electrician, a clamp on amp meter on the conductor that the breaker feeds will tell you what is happening. Clamp the line and turn on the load to see exactly what the current is. If, like you say, the breaker is properly rated and the current is within the breaker limits then change out the breaker for a new one.
A Trip to Chinatown was created in 1891.
yes i loved that trip but it still was bad
Maybe you have other electrical drains on that breaker line that cause it to exceed the 15 or 20 amp limit. Fix it.
If it is a line thermostat and it is connected across the line instead of in series with the load then yes it will trip the breaker.
NCL stands for Norwegian Cruise Line. You can purchase a trip for a cruise by going to your own travel agent and inquiring about a trip on this cruise line.
The power overload is what causes the LCD television to trip off.
Field Trip - 1997 In the Line of Dooty - 2.4 was released on: USA: 1997
A fought line is a line that causes earthquakes.
Buckle
Field Trip - 1997 In the Line of Dooty 2-4 was released on: USA: 1997
It means your trip was all in a straight line, and you never backtracked.
Spring pressure
by a slanting line
A higher voltage means that a higher current will flow in the same load. It is the current that causes the breaker to trip.