wondering if some one could let me know if our circuit breaker in the van lumbaute abb c16 guess that means it trips at 16 amps ? Wifey has just purchased a portable induction cooker 220-240 v -50-60HZ
Power 2100W
could our circuit breaker handle this cooker when the vans hooked up to 240 v or will it trip out any help would be much appreciated.....
The Travelling Dillberries said
05:12 PM Dec 22, 2018
Ron-D wrote:
wondering if some one could let me know if our circuit breaker in the van lumbaute abb c16 guess that means it trips at 16 amps ? Wifey has just purchased a portable induction cooker 220-240 v -50-60HZ
Power 2100W
could our circuit breaker handle this cooker when the vans hooked up to 240 v or will it trip out any help would be much appreciated.....
2100Watt is just under 9 amps so won't trip if on by itself. (yes it is a 16amp breaker, C curve). For anything 240 V just divide the wattage by 240 = current (amps). If other things on with it add total amps. In your case need to total less than 16.
-- Edited by The Travelling Dillberries on Saturday 22nd of December 2018 05:15:57 PM
Ron-D said
08:35 AM Dec 23, 2018
Thanks for the info Chris I could not find the formula on the net..
Whenarewethere said
06:53 PM Dec 23, 2018
One to watch out for is the microwave. They have a far higher input than output.
wondering if some one could let me know if our circuit breaker in the van lumbaute abb c16 guess that means it trips at 16 amps ? Wifey has just purchased a portable induction cooker 220-240 v -50-60HZ
Power 2100W
could our circuit breaker handle this cooker when the vans hooked up to 240 v or will it trip out any help would be much appreciated.....
2100Watt is just under 9 amps so won't trip if on by itself. (yes it is a 16amp breaker, C curve). For anything 240 V just divide the wattage by 240 = current (amps). If other things on with it add total amps. In your case need to total less than 16.
-- Edited by The Travelling Dillberries on Saturday 22nd of December 2018 05:15:57 PM
Thanks for the info Chris I could not find the formula on the net..
One to watch out for is the microwave. They have a far higher input than output.