If you worked on .5v drop allowance in the real electrical world, you would go broke!![]()
I personally get annoyed with drop of more than about .2v end to end at nominated load. anything more than 1V between supply and end appliance at nominal load I'll fail and I'll start asking questions at the .5v mark
Bare in mind that in this instance, end to end is not from supply to end use its from major point to major point. for example
battery to primary fuse box
primary fuse box to aux fuse panel
Aux fuse panel to connection point to end appliance
All of those I'd accept upto .2v drop at each stage (regardless of how many connections or meters of run)
but in this example
battery to primary fuse box
primary fuse box to aux fuse panel
Aux fuse panel to trailer connector
Trailer connector to trailer fuse panel
Fuse panel to trailer battery charge controller
if you had .2v at every leg of the system you'd be at 1v of drop
But remember I'm also only aiming at the nominal loading, If in the last example you nominally wanted to charge the battery at 10A but your charge controller was a 30A unit (assuming everything was capable of handling it) if the controller was pulling 25A and you had 1V of drop Id probably consider that acceptable so long as when the initial in rush of starting the charger had leveled out or the charge rate was down to 10A then the drop would want to be under .5V
Of course in a design spec like that I'd be having a good long hard look at why you'd want that configuration (in this instance there was a solar system build in the trailer, the 10a feed from the vehicle was only intended to keep already charged batteries topped up which was when I learned that yes, over a long enough run min spec 10A cable will allow a full short to occur and not blow a 10A fuse)
Dave
"In a Landrover the other vehicle is your crumple zone."
For spelling call Rogets, for mechanicing call me.
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Archaeoptersix 1990 6x6 dual cab(This things staying)
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If you worked on .5v drop allowance in the real electrical world, you would go broke!![]()
Protection Coordination of Circuit Breakers - GSES
I suspect the scenario described above is pro'ly due to a poor earth, so the full short circuit current wasn't able to flow and rupture the fuse. Although in a 12 volt automotive system the battery may not be able to produce a fault current for long enough to operate a fuse that is only mildly overloaded, not so in a HV generator system that can produce massive currents.
People also confuse overload, over current and short circuit, from the above graph it can be seen that a mild overload can be permitted for up to 4 hours, but as the overload value increases the trip time shortens.
Last edited by RANDLOVER; 7th October 2020 at 02:06 AM. Reason: Added Link
2005 D3 TDV6 Present
1999 D2 TD5 Gone
Yes - High resistance in the earth is often overlooked and very few Electricians consider fault currents or fault loop impedance when calculating cable size and breakers either. In the home environment it's always just been 'Stick in some 2.5 and a 20 amp breaker' and in the commercial & industrial field it isn't much better at times from what I experience even in large installations of a few thousand amps - this conversation only really comes up when I'm speaking to Engineers and Inspectors - although explaining fault current paths in generators to some Inspectors is like pulling teeth. Driving an earth stake in certain situations can actually increase fault trip times as well with gens, but this is also poorly understood by most even though it is covered in the Regs.
If you need to contact me please email homestarrunnerau@gmail.com - thanks - Gav.
1985 110 Dual Cab 4.6 R380 ARB Lockers (currently NIS due to roof kissing road)
1985 110 Station Wagon 3.5 LT85 (unmolested blank canvas)
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