Hm. You could certainly try it. Anything that might drop the voltage a little would probably sort it out. We have ascertained that the issue relates to overpowering the breaker due to something to do with the incoming AC power.
It happens on any outlet in the area; its not related to which side of the line or whether there is leakage from another component. Its entirely to do with the power transformer and the incoming power.
I doubt that its a surge thing- it happens consistently. A surge would only show up occasionally. So I'm going with 'no, that won't help' in this case. Measured line voltage is fine so its not an over-voltage condition of any kind.
This is all assuming that the measurements are correct and the behaviors accurately reported!
Another possibility is a shorted current inrush limiter. A third possibility is that the breaker has developed some residual magnetism and no longer breaks at the right point- IOW its become too sensitive. Simple replacement of the breaker would solve that. Any one of these problems could be such that it would not show up elsewhere due to variables like line voltage and such.
For example if Cary put the unit on a variac when they tested it, the variac may well have functioned to limit the surge current enough so it was no worries. At the other field location, there could have been something with the wiring or the unit was plugged into a power strip with other gear already on it. Power strips only have one power cord, so there could have been a temporary voltage drop, eliminating the problem.
I like to go for the simplest answer as the best one so my thinking right now is the breaker itself is defective.
It happens on any outlet in the area; its not related to which side of the line or whether there is leakage from another component. Its entirely to do with the power transformer and the incoming power.
I doubt that its a surge thing- it happens consistently. A surge would only show up occasionally. So I'm going with 'no, that won't help' in this case. Measured line voltage is fine so its not an over-voltage condition of any kind.
This is all assuming that the measurements are correct and the behaviors accurately reported!
Another possibility is a shorted current inrush limiter. A third possibility is that the breaker has developed some residual magnetism and no longer breaks at the right point- IOW its become too sensitive. Simple replacement of the breaker would solve that. Any one of these problems could be such that it would not show up elsewhere due to variables like line voltage and such.
For example if Cary put the unit on a variac when they tested it, the variac may well have functioned to limit the surge current enough so it was no worries. At the other field location, there could have been something with the wiring or the unit was plugged into a power strip with other gear already on it. Power strips only have one power cord, so there could have been a temporary voltage drop, eliminating the problem.
I like to go for the simplest answer as the best one so my thinking right now is the breaker itself is defective.