Boy do we miss George (not really).... I don't want to stir the pot too much - nor be another George.
Mark F, I think you have it turned around. Circuit breakers are designed to protect conductors. It makes perfect sense too. Since one can't know what devices are going to plugged into a circuit, the breaker limits the amount of current than can be drawn through the conductor, and also protects against short circuit. The only way a circuit breaker is "over-sized" is if the wire is undersized for the current rating on the breaker, for example, using a 50A breaker on 12 Ga wire.
Remember that 12V DC circuits have 10 times the current as 120V AC circuits for the same wattage.
A GFCI is designed to protect people. Surge protectors are used to protect equipment. You can have these features designed into specialty breakers or in separate devices such as power strips or GFCI outlets.
Siemens has a nice explanation on their web site, in short:
The protection function is not quite so easily understood. What is a molded case circuit breaker intended to protect? What can an over-current protective device be expected to do and what is beyond the scope of its design? Sec. 240.1 (FPN) of the NEC has the following to say about over-current protection:
Over-current protection for conductors and equipment is provided to open the circuit if the current reaches a value that will cause an excessive or dangerous temperature in the conductors or conductor insulation.
So, circuit breakers are intended to protect conductors (insulated wires) by opening automatically before damage is caused by excessive temperatures. This protection applies to the permanently installed wiring of homes, offices, and industrial buildings. In protecting these wires, over-current protective devices reduce the risk of fire, personal injury, and damage to equipment and property
https://www.sea.siemens.com/reselec/pro ... rpose.html
MJ's design uses breakers designed for supplemental protection (UL1077 compared to UL489 which is for Branch circuit protection). I assume he is relying on the breaker at the campsite to protect upstream of their connection and his main fuse is protecting the extension cord that connects the trailer to the post, while his push button breakers are protecting the wires between what he connects inside the trailer.
Needless to say, selecting circuit breakers and fuses can be a complicated process. In addition to current ratings, there are trip curves (thermal) and interruption (short circuit) ratings.
I've only sold the various circuit protection products and am
not an engineer. I gave the engineers the information they needed to make decisions that would allow their equipment meet the codes where they were to be installed and offer the protection they required.
In what I have seen, I will put in a molded case UL489 breaker (household style) to protect what comes in the trailer and then use smaller supplemental protection inside the trailer.
As always, it's your trailer, make the decisions you are comfortable with.
Mark