G'day Don,

Is it possible that the air conditioner circuit breaker is doing exactly 
what it is designed to do?  that is sensing current overload/excess heat and 
tripping to shut off the circuit to protect your household wiring against 
fire.

If the circuit breaker has tripped off only 3 times in 2 years, it doesn't 
seem too big a problem.  Is it possible the air conditioner unit is not on a 
dedicated circuit of its own?  So when some other household electrical 
appliance coincidentally switches on with the AC compressor, say the 
refrigerator/freezer, the overall current drain is too large.  Even if the 
excess current drain is only momentary the circuit breaker senses it and it 
trips off?

I've recently been told to keep in mind that while a wire rated at 15amps 
should theoretically carry 15amps all day long, in practice 15amp breakers 
and fuses can only carry 12amps 80 percent of their rating on a continuous 
basis. Continuous basis is considered to be a circuit loaded to capacity for 
three hours or more.  This 80 percent rule applies to all breakers and 
fuses.

I don't know where you live, but I know that on a hot Summer's day here in 
Melbourne Australia, when the outside temperature is up around 42ºC 
(108ºF)my AC unit is running full bore for around 10 hours non-stop. 
Fortunately my external AC compressor is on its own dedicated circuit.  Most 
electricians will suggest a dedicated circuit for any appliance that will draw 
more than half the capacity of a circuit.

I'm sure Dave from Belfast, when his time zone wakes up, will have some more 
knowledgeable ideas on causes and remedies. 

Cheers,

John

Melbourne Australia.

From: Don
To: blind handy man
Sent: Thursday, September 20, 2007 10:58 AM
Subject: [BlindHandyMan] AC problem.


HI list, twice this cooling season, the out side unit of my central AC 
system, has kicked a breaker. With city code we have a breaker box, write 
beside the unit out side. I simply walk out side and flip the breaker. The 
unit comes back on fine, and runs with know problems, for weeks are even a 
month are two.
The only way I know the out side unit is not running, the air coming out of 
the vents in the house gets warm, grin.
So I'm not in a bind, I'm just looking for some ideas, of why in the hell, 
this thing is throwing the circuit breaker, out side, from time to time?
Regards Don 


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