Take a look at Sewerzewk's sticky regarding the Main Breaker on these units, its interesting reading. There is a main breaker which will disengage the load on the terminal lugs but the inner workings of this type of breaker will allow varying amounts of load for varying amounts of time depending on the amount of load, type of load ( resistive or inductive ) and if it is a short surge or an extended load. The makeup of the breaker will allow it to endure a higher sustained resistive load from say heating elements than it will from a high surge from an inductive load like a large electric motor starting up.
Thanks, Ray70; good stuff there in the Sticky:
- I got about 2 pages into it, and then my head started to ache.
- I'll have to tackle it in increments; a bite-at-a-time.
I'm a carpenter, and so never deal much with problems more complicated than "too long" or "too short" (well, you know +/-). Electricity just plain isn't that simple.
And whenever I tried to figure the stuff out, and asked an electrician to explain it to me, always seemed that they knew exactly what they were talking about, but just didn't have a way of explaining it in any way to break through clearly to my dull skull.
But the more I get explanations from different people and sources (time and again), the more it begins to soak in. So, thanks a million!
Electricity: very cool, but it seems kind of a like magic alchemy, at least to me.