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Posted By: Elzappr Megging circuit breakers - 06/15/03 08:21 PM
Anyone know the scoop about how to safely meg a circuit breaker? I often wonder if all the electronics that are part of circuit breakers these days would mess up megger readings. Suppose, for example, someone wants to meg out a circuit from a supply bus bar, through a distribution panel circuit breaker, through the feeder conductors..stopping at the open branch circuit breaker. Is this a practice which might show misleadingly low resistance numbers due solely to the feeder circuit breaker's electronic trip package?
Are there limits to how high the test voltage should be? Would a 1kV test voltage mess up, or interact with the trip unit, in a 240 volt breaker?
Posted By: Bjarney Re: Megging circuit breakers - 06/15/03 11:09 PM
It’s probably a little more common to use 500VDC on 240/208V stuff. As for readings, it’s primarily a matter of experience, and comparing pole-to-pole readings for lack of any IR history. In electronic-trip molded-case breakers, if there is no external communications or relaying, the meg tests generally shouldn’t damage anything—but get your mitts on the breaker instruction pamphlet for any warnings.

Biddle sells a booklet titled “A Stitch in Time” that covers the subject in a practical manner.

Obviously, megging a VFD would be suicide.
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