Nuisance tripping of AFCI circuit breaker by inrush of current when turning on amplifiers


I recently added an Accuphase power supply for my Accuphase mono blocks.  When I turn on the second mono block it trips the AFCI circuit breaker.  I had no trouble using the mono blocks with a Puritan Audio PSM 156 power conditioner, but it is passive.  The Accuphase PS-1250 is power regenerator with a huge toroidal transformer and a large mechanical on/off switch.  I imagine either the inrush of current from the PS-1250 + 2 mono blocks is too much for the AFCI breaker or their mechanical switches are creating arcs their algorithms do not recognize as normal.

I have a 10 year old Siemens 15 amp AFCI breaker, and my question is what best to replace it with?  I have read that AFCI breakers have improved considerably with less nuisance tripping, and the first step would be to use a current model as a replacement.  But is there a better solution?

Square D makes 'High Magnetic' AFCI breakers that are less prone to nuisance tripping, but I don't know if they would even fit in my panel.  I'm not sure if Siemens makes a similar product.

An electrician coming over at the end of the week, but I thought I would ask here as this must be an issue many audio hobbyists have encountered with AFCI breakers.

toronto416

Could be: 

1. Touchy old AFCI breaker - install new one (same brand), easiest fix

2. AFCIs need neutrals wired back to the same breaker the hot came from. If not, they'll trip all the time. But if a big vacuum cleaner or power tool doesn't trip it, it's likely wired ok.

3. Overcurrent - you need a 20A circuit installed.

Let us know what the electrician says. Good luck! 

 

Electrician failed to show today, so I contacted another company.  A frustrating delay...

I know electricians are in demand, so I need to be patient.  

Hi Toronto 416,

please keep us updated, I’m really interested in how this turns out

rich

@toronto416 , @devinplombier made a very good suggestion!

Breakers break more easily the more they break. Eventually they are breaking at far lower currents than they are rated.

So you might just try replacing the breaker with a new one and problem solved.