What's the best way to figure this out? Our equipment in the shop is over the rated load for the box but we don't have problems with breakers tripping when everything is on. My understanding is that this is because machines draw more heavily when heating up then reach a cruising altitude where they draw less energy.
My understanding is that this is because machines draw more heavily when heating up then reach a cruising altitude where they draw less energy. I am not an electrician bit I don,t believe this is actually true. When the machine ( your dryer or flash) is warming up it is drawing all the current it needs at a staedy rate. It is not like the cruise control in you car that will well over rev your engine at high RPM to run back up to the set speed and lower cruise RPM.
The only real time you dryer draws higher current is the very few nano-seconds when you turn it on. It is basically called inrush current.
Because the electrical conduit has no current it has the ability to draw a great deal of current untill the electrical conduit is filled so to speak. You can often see this in a light bulb the blows the very instant you switch it on. The element draws high current for just a few nano seconds because it has no load or current therefor a large capacity (emptyness) to take current. I have seen super slow motion video of a bulb lighting up. the element actually shutters and over glows evev so slightly until it hits normal current load.
The final answer is simply to get an amp meter thro it the the feed line and see the actual ampaeage starting up and running.
FYI
Inrush Current Causes and Cures. Learn about Inrush Current Limiters
https://www.ametherm.com/inrush-current/Inrush Current Limiters are used to reduce the inrush current that occurs when an electrical device is switched on. High inrush current is the result of the maximum instantaneous input current drawn by an electrical device during the initial power up.
mooseman
Inrush Current Solutions
Inrush Current Limiters are used to reduce the inrush current that occurs when an electrical device is switched on. High inrush current is the result of the maximum instantaneous input current drawn by an electrical device during the initial power up. As technology continues to advance, most systems today run efficiently and maintain a low impedance which in turn contributes to high inrush current.
Additionally, devices that produce alternating current such as electric motors or transformers can draw several times their steady state current at switch on. Although this additional draw of inrush often lasts less than ½ of a normal 60 hertz cycle, that is enough time to cause possible damage to the equipment.