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Myth: A Circuit Breaker Rated 100A Will Always Carry 100A Safely

Per IEC 60947-2, circuit breaker rated current assumes 40°C ambient in open air. In enclosed switchboards at elevated temperatures, actual continuous capacity can drop to 70-80A. Temperature derating, enclosure heating, and mounting orientation all reduce the nameplate rating.

3 min readUpdated March 12, 2026
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The Myth

“It says 100A on the breaker. It carries 100A. End of story.”

If only it were that simple. The rated current printed on a circuit breaker is a nominal value tested under specific, standardised conditions. Change those conditions — as every real installation does — and the actual continuous current capacity changes with them.

The Reference Conditions Nobody Reads

Per IEC 60947-2, Clause 8.3.2.5, the rated current (In) of a circuit breaker is verified at a reference ambient temperature of 40°C, with the device mounted in open air (not in an enclosure), in the vertical orientation specified by the manufacturer.

Real installations differ in every one of these conditions:

ConditionReference (Test)Typical RealityEffect on Capacity
Ambient temperature40°C45–55°C inside switchboard−5% to −20%
EnclosureOpen airIP54/IP65 enclosed switchboard−5% to −15%
Adjacent devicesSingle device testedMultiple breakers, contactors, busbars−5% to −10% (mutual heating)
Mounting orientationVertical (as specified)Sometimes horizontal−0% to −10%

These effects are cumulative. A 100A MCCB in a fully loaded, enclosed switchboard at 50°C internal ambient may carry only 70–80A continuously without exceeding its thermal limits.

The Derating Data Buried in the Catalogue

Every reputable manufacturer publishes temperature derating curves for their circuit breakers. They are typically on page 47 of a 200-page catalogue, in 8-point font. Nobody reads them until something trips unexpectedly on a hot afternoon.

Representative derating for a typical 100A thermal-magnetic MCCB:

Ambient TemperatureContinuous Current CapacityPercentage of In
30°C107A107%
40°C (reference)100A100%
45°C95A95%
50°C88A88%
55°C82A82%
60°C75A75%

Note: the ambient temperature here is the air temperature surrounding the breaker inside the enclosure, not the room temperature outside the switchboard. A switchboard in a 35°C plant room with poor ventilation and full load on adjacent devices can easily reach 55°C internally. At 55°C, that 100A breaker carries 82A before it starts to thermally age or nuisance-trip.

Field note: We had a 250A MCCB main breaker at a remote pump station — outdoor IP65 enclosure, direct sun, no shade structure. Internal ambient measured at 62°C on a 42°C day. The manufacturer’s derating curve showed 68% capacity at 60°C: 170A actual. The pump drew 195A. The breaker tripped every afternoon from 1pm to 4pm. The “solution” from the site electrician was to hold the breaker closed with a cable tie. The actual solution was a sun shade and ventilation fans — bringing internal ambient to 48°C and restoring 90% capacity.

The Reality: Design for the Actual Conditions

The correct engineering approach:

  1. Determine the actual internal ambient temperature of the switchboard. For existing boards, measure it. For new designs, calculate it per IEC 61439-1, Clause 10.10 (temperature rise test) or use the manufacturer’s thermal modelling tools.
  2. Apply the manufacturer’s derating curve to determine actual continuous capacity at that temperature.
  3. Account for adjacent device heating. The manufacturer’s thermal test for switchboard assemblies (IEC 61439-1, Clause 10.10) considers adjacent devices. If designing a new panel, use the assembly manufacturer’s verified power loss data.
  4. Select the breaker size with margin. If the derated capacity of a 100A breaker at your conditions is 82A, and the load is 80A, you are at 97.6% of actual capacity — too close. Select the 125A frame, which at the same derating gives 103A actual, providing a workable margin.

The nameplate rating is a starting point for selection, not the final answer. The final answer comes from the derating curve and the actual installation conditions.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Electronic trip units are less temperature-sensitive than bimetallic thermal elements, but they are not immune. The current transformers and electronic components still have thermal limits. Most manufacturers show a flatter derating curve for electronic trip MCCBs — typically 90-95% at 55°C vs 80-82% for thermal-magnetic. However, the power semiconductors in the breaker's interrupting mechanism are also affected by temperature, which impacts interrupting capacity, not just continuous current rating.
The rated short-circuit breaking capacity (Icu/Ics) is specified at the reference ambient temperature. Most manufacturers do not publish temperature derating for breaking capacity, and the IEC standard does not require testing at elevated temperatures for this parameter. However, at elevated temperatures, the breaker mechanism may be closer to its thermal limits, potentially affecting performance during a fault interruption. For critical applications in hot environments, consult the manufacturer directly.
Use calibrated thermocouples or data loggers placed at the breaker location, recording over at least 24 hours under representative load conditions. Infrared thermography from outside the panel is useful for hot-spot detection but does not accurately measure internal ambient air temperature. IEC 61439-1 specifies measurement points for type-testing — the air temperature should be measured 20mm from the device, shielded from radiant heat from adjacent busbars.

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