American Locomotive
Well-known member
The circuit won't care. There is no benefit. On a dead short, any breaker will trip in less than 1 AC cycle.I'm not on site.
I wasn't asking for you guys to figure out what breakers to use. The manual says 20a and the HVAC company says 20a, so I will replace the 25 or 30a ones in there with 20s. I'm pretty sure they're 25s. What I was asking was what would the theoretical benefit be to using 20s on a circuit made for 25s. Is it just following the manual? Do the 20s trip easier? What sort of situation would happen where the 25s would not trip and the 20s would, and would it matter?
With automotive fuses, the smaller fuse burns out quicker, more likely saving the wiring in the case of a short. Is it the same for breakers? Or does a short trip the 20 and 25a breakers equally fast?
The equipment may want a 20A breaker vs. a 25 because the input circuitry on the control boards may not be sized to handle anything larger, and could possibly smoke or blow in the event of an overload situation.
All modern minisplits have electronically driven inverter motors, so I'm not sure if NEC motor sizing tables apply?