I was using a chop saw in the shop Wednesday and the next day It trips the 20 amp breaker. The saw data tag shows 20 amps so I'm guessing I need a dedicated circuit?
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They do go bad, but you may also have an inrush current doing it. Different breakers are more sensitive.
Bill
Our 100 amp main breaker in our old house failed while we were on a 2 week motorcycle trip. Came home to a 4' puddle of blood from our upright freezer.

The mechanism also ratchets up from hi current starts.
Originally I was using an extension cord= worked fine, next day same setup didn't work. Plugged in at the receptacle= no workie.
American Locomotive nailed it. Breakers are intended to carry a steady load of up to 80% of their rated capacity, and so a 20A breaker will eventually trip due to heat with a steady load over 16A.
If you want to pull a steady 20A, you need a 20A/0.8=25A breaker. Then there is the inrush current, which is another problem.
This is incorrect.
Breakers will supply 100% of their rating just about indefinitely.
Per the NEC, the max continuous load (>3 hrs ) cannot be more than 80% of the branch circuit OPD.