Hi again Owen, I was generalising to give everybody an idea on the best way to select appropriate circuit breakers for the job required of them.
In your case, with 4G cable, the 100 amp circuit breakers will give you safe short circuit protection but most people, when setting up a dual battery system for running a fridge don’t usually fit such heavy cable and a combination of smaller cable size and the length of cable can easily get to the point where the cables resistance in a short circuit situation is such that it would allow enough current to be carried to cause a 100 amp circuit breaker to trip immediately and that’s the reason for only fitting circuit breakers that will accommodate the maximum likely continuos operating current.
The smaller the circuit breaker, the quicker it will operate in a short circuit event, the safer the whole system is.
There are many occasions where the cable size and length has got such a restriction on the current capacity of the whole circuit and the circuit breaker was not small enough to trip in an overload situation. Not a full short circuit was needed for a fires to start.
It doesn’t have to be a heavy current battery to battery situation for a fire to occur. Back in the 60s both Ford and GM were having problems with their vehicle’s headlights not being bright enough, so they fitted heavier wire to try to fix the problem. This resulted in fuses continuously blowing. The fix was to fit a circuit breaker and a big one so that it wouldn’t keep tripping and as a result it was common place to get fires starting in the headlight wiring in these vehicles.
So as you can see, for safe installations, it is imperative to design the whole system correctly, particularly with relations to the size of the circuit protection device, fuse or circuit breaker.
BTW, the headlight problem was finally resolved when Ford and GM simply copied what the European car makers had been doing for years. They fitted headlight relays.
Cheers


Reply With Quote

Bookmarks