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Can anyone tell me what the trip time and trip current are for these solid-state breaker circuits used in your DCC systems? That is, if the current limit is 2 amps, how much current has to flow before it trips? 2.1 ? Or does it have to go about 50% over the limit (3A in this example). And how quickly does it trip?Are these things actually current sensing circuits like a classic "crowbar" circuit, or are they just using things like the Raychem Polyswitch solid-state auto-resetting devices?I ask because I long ago gave up on the bulb, thermal breakers, fuses, and Polyswitches because none of them trip quickly enough for me. I want something that trips instantly when the current goes, say, 10% over the line.What I actually did for now (and it's definitely an odd solution, I admit), was use an analog current meter in the line, inside of which I built a little physical "whisker" such that when the meter goes over my current limit, it touches one whisker against another (as a switch) and turns off the current via a latching relay. I still left the main thermal breaker in there just because. It may be hokey, but it darn well trips when the current is just a hair over my limit and it trips instantly with no excuses.
What you seem to need for your application is precision over-current protection rather than simply short-circuit protection. Out of curiosity, what would get damaged by a current draw of ~2.2A that would otherwise function properly at 2A?Also, how fast do you need the protector to trip?Specifically which polymeric PTC device(s) did you try?There is quite a variety of such products available.http://www.littelfuse.com/products/resettable-ptcs.aspxhttp://www.littelfuse.com/products/resettable-ptcs/radial-leaded.aspx
This is interesting. I use a 1.0A blade fuse to protect my dcc system and locomotives. It trips when something shorts on a turnout and is well below maximum current for the system. I bought fifty fuses on eBay for a pittance and have blown perhaps five since installing this solution.
Here are links to info related to the light bulb over-current protectors. If you actually bother to read completely through this info, you'll find warnings there, very similar to what we are telling you here.https://sites.google.com/site/markgurries/home/technical-discussions/dcc-circuit-breakers/light-bulbshttp://cs.trains.com/mrr/f/744/t/215408.aspxhttp://model-railroad-hobbyist.com/magazine/mrh-2014-11-nov/di_short-protectionhttp://www.modelrailforum.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=10173http://www.wiringfordcc.com/track.htmhttp://www.rr-cirkits.com/Notebook/short.htmlBut hey, if it works for you - keep on using it. But I also felt that it was my duty to present my warning. I'm done here -there is nothing more I can say about this subject.