Faulting vs Tripping

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I’m no electrical engineer nor electrician and my job requires a lot of maintenance activities at a plant and I’ve searched and ask engineers but I can’t grasp what they really mean in simple terms.

In: Engineering

4 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Faults are things that are not supposed to happen, like a hot wire conducting to Ground. Trips are protection system reactions to what they determine as a fault. Circuit breakers trip when too much current runs through them and GFCIs trip when the current out the hot wire doesn’t match the current back on the neutral wire.

The idea, in a safe system design, is that faults cause trips. Protection systems are supposed to detect faults and safe the system. It is possible to overdo protection, so that not all trips are the result of a fault. For example, a high current motor can surge when the coils are powering up and trip an incorrectly chosen GFCI. A breaker that’s worn can trip at less than the specified current, annoying the hell out of maintenance electricians.

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