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Airpax Large

DISCLAIMER: This topic is for discussing these types of breakers.  The 10A "Instant trip" example pictured above might not be right for your application.  Choosing the right Amperage rating and Time delay should be based on several factors and less than or equal to the nominal output rating of the transformer to which they are connected.  If you think you may want to use a breaker of this style and you are unsure of the correct model, please ask for help here in the Electrical Forum  in choosing the right one for your application.



Airpax Snapac Hydraulic-Magnetic Circuit Breaker Internal Mechanisms - Updated 12/4/2021

Introduction:  These very fast acting circuit breakers are ideally suited for use in helping protect the sensitive electronics within modern Locomotives (TMCC/Legacy, Lion Chief (all versions), DCS, ERR and others especially when power is supplied from postwar transformers. These Airpax breakers are ideally suited to use on a layout when a mix of Command and Conventional Locomotives are run.

The Airpax "Instant" models presented here will trip in 1/10th of a second when their rated current (in Amps) is exceeded.  They are faster than fast blow fuses and much faster than the original internal Thermal breakers that came stock inside postwar transformers.

The other part of helping protect locomotives' electronics is combining fast acting breakers with TVS (Transient Voltage Suppression) diodes located strategically around the layout.  Since there are numerous other references on this Forum, I will not go into detail about those here.

When I first read about these products here on OGR in early 2021, I decided to learn more about them. This series of hydraulic-magnetic breakers is called AirPax Snapac and is made by Sensata/Airpax.

Their data sheet is attached below.

There is more information on the web about their larger cousins (for example https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sJU2pTdUyY0 ) used for higher voltage and amperage circuits, how they work and cut-away animations, but I was unable to find details on the inner workings of these smaller Airpax Snapac hydraulic-magnetic versions.

I decided to cut open one of the Airpax Snapac 10A “Instant” trip breakers. They are very similar, in that they have an Arc Chute (for dissipating the arc created by the opening contacts when they trip). They also have what appears to be a gas filled piston inside a coil, but there is one subtle difference in the way it activates the trip linkage. As the current in its stationary coil rises towards a set value, the resulting increase in the magnetic field overcomes the spring tension on the disconnect mechanism and pulls on a lever and disengages the contacts.

AirPax Cutaway3AirPax1

Airpax Snapac hydraulic-magnetic breakers are available with different time delays before tripping at the rated current (Amps). They come in Instant                       ( 100 millisecond delay), Fast (slower than the Instant and the delay time varies by how much above the rated current the actual current flow through them is for a variable period of time), and Slow (which has delay characteristics similar to a Slow Blow fuse).

Choosing the right type of breaker is dependent upon many factors and choosing correctly can mean the difference between experiencing nuisance tripping before the the optimal current flow is reached in the protected circuits, to just right protection, to being either to slow or overrated and not providing adequate protection to prevent damage to the transformer and what's connected to it.



Here are links to the Airpax Snapac "Instant" trip Series Breakers



5 Amp   PP11-0-5.00A-OB-V   https://www.onlinecomponents.c...00aobv-10090638.html or https://octopart.com/search?q=...ency=USD&specs=0



7.5 Amp   PP11-0-7.50A-OC-V   https://www.onlinecomponents.c...50aocv-10090644.html or  Link to Alternative overseas Distributor or https://octopart.com/search?q=...ency=USD&specs=0



10 Amp   PP11-0-10.0A-OB-V   https://www.onlinecomponents.c...00aobv-10090622.html or https://octopart.com/search?q=...ency=USD&specs=0



12.5 Amp (no button markings)   PR11-0-12.5A-XX   https://www.onlinecomponents.c...125axx-43802931.html or https://octopart.com/search?q=...ency=USD&specs=0



Links to the Fast and Slow varieties are not included here, but can be found on the same website. Their part numbers differ by having a PP11 -1 - xxxx(Current rating) for Fast, and PP11 -2 - xxxxx(Current rating) for Slow.



Here is some basic information on choosing the correct Amperage rating for a breaker:

There are a few electrical fundamentals in addition to the trip delay time one should understand when choosing a breaker. The transformer Output ratings are a good place to start.  Here's what they mean:

Volts - (electrical energy potential) in Conventional operation this sets the train speed.
Amps (current flow) - More Locos, cars and such (and shorts) pull more current through the circuit from the transformer.  The transformer only delivers as much current as required by the load, up to a point.  This point is it's Output rating.

AC Transformer Output ratings are usually given in either Watts or VoltAmps, both of which have essentially the same meaning when choosing breaker size.

Watts = Volts x Amps = VA
or

Watts/Volts = Amps



An often asked question is how to connect a Circuit Breaker and TVS Diodes.  Here is a very basic example of a simple loop connected to one transformer:

Track Connections2a

If you're looking for the ultimate in protection for your Legacy locomotive's electronics, installing TVS diodes inside the locomotives, on the PCB track power inputs is the best way to protect their sensitive electronics.  TVS installed on the transformer outputs is a good step, but high frequency voltage spikes will travel past these.

Here's a link to the Topic started by Adrian! and his explanation of how this happens:

Words about TVS Placement

from that topic:

TVS

I hope this helps.

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  • Airpax Large
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Last edited by SteveH
Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

I can’t answer your questions, but I will say that those 10A breakers might be too slow.  I got some Airpax Snapak breakers a few years ago.  They were too slow.  Mine are PP11-2, so your PP11-0 breakers may be faster.  I ended up replacing them with Eaton-FAZ-B breakers (3, 4 and 5 amp) and I’m happy with them.

@Lehigh74 posted:

I can’t answer your questions, but I will say that those 10A breakers might be too slow.  I got some Airpax Snapak breakers a few years ago.  They were too slow.  Mine are PP11-2, so your PP11-0 breakers may be faster.  I ended up replacing them with Eaton-FAZ-B breakers (3, 4 and 5 amp) and I’m happy with them.

Thanks for that insight and a good point. The second part of the model number indicates the trip delay.  The -0 is supposed to be "instant".

airpax delay

The time delay plots are on page 65 of the data sheet.

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Last edited by SteveH

It was offered as a rebuttal to the notion that we need to immerse ourselves in never-ending hand-wringing over trying to make the electric toy train hobby resemble NASA projects.  If electronic components of toy trains are not robust enough in their design or applications, then we need to rethink the design and applications, not fret over multi-dollar protection devices that the manufacturers apparently didn't seem to feel necessary.

As has been explained many times by the electronic experts here, there are only a few things we can do to protect the fragile electronics inside a locomotive, should a fault occur outside the locomotive. The cure to the perceived or real volatility in the electronic components is to source them and design their circuitry so as not to be susceptible to external faults.

My remarks were offered, as are most here, in the spirit of getting a conversation going. They were not made to deride "modern electronics" whatever that means. They were, however, made to try to poke the manufacturers into getting their act together.  My favorite "fix" has been the "add a light bulb and see if that helps" mentality.

Last edited by Arthur P. Bloom

@Arthur P. Bloom I want to thank you for your opinion.  You are certainly welcome to manage your model train layout in the way that you'd prefer.  There is no intent on my part here to tell you or anyone else otherwise, and I respect everyone's decisions even if I may not agree.  I'm not trying to tell anyone to over-complicate the way they might desire to wire their layout.  I'm also not trying to convince you or anyone to change their way of thinking about this.  I am trying to learn specifically about how these breakers function.

Rather than continue debating your points of view on this thread, would you please consider starting your own topic to discuss your grievances about your opinions on complexity?

For the sake of any newbies who may be following this thread:

(1) Fuses and circuit breakers are neither new nor novel.  In particular they have not been introduced in recent years as "band aids", and have never been considered such at any time.  They are a fundamental part of electrical safety and have been so since electricity was first harnessed in the 1800's.  This is very, very mature technology and is depended upon every day in thousands of applications, in industry, transportation, offices, homes, and yes even toys. 

(2) Safety does not concern only whether your locomotive or accessory quits.  Your electric train has the capacity to, and very likely has in at least one case in the past, burn(ed) down a house, or at least started a significant fire.  (If it hasn't, or couldn't, why would a safety organization like Underwriter's Laboratories (UL) be so involved with toy train transformers for all of these years?)

My apologies for elevating the discussion.  This is not a political rant.  These are hard-and-fast technical facts.  (This forum has proven to be very helpful in disseminating the important technical facts if you just let it.)

M.H.M.

This is an important discussion as I am always looking for better ways to protect the very  expensive electronics in my trains.   An ounce of prevention versus the pound of cure.  Anytime I see a post on this topic I read and reread making notes that could possibly protect my trains and my layout.

Thanks for bringing this up.

Last edited by Keith k

As has been explained many times by the electronic experts here, there are only a few things we can do to protect the fragile electronics inside a locomotive, should a fault occur outside the locomotive. The cure to the perceived or real volatility in the electronic components is to source them and design their circuitry so as not to be susceptible to external faults.

The Lionel PowerHouse 180 has a fast acting (maybe instantaneous?) breaker.  However, none of the postwar transformers have these, nor do many other modern transformers. There have been multiple discussions about this these Sensata/Airpax magnetic and magnetic-hydraulic breakers, as well as similar ones from Carling Technology.  The goal, as I see it, is to add a comparable level of protection to these older transformers. 

While TVS diodes are a good idea, and highly recommended, in the case of a short circuit, the safest and surest way to avoid damage is to remove the electrical current as quickly as possible.  That is the purpose of these circuit breakers.

Why toss/junk a perfectly good transformer, and spend $100+ when a $20 breaker can remedy this?

Steve, I had a link for octaport.com but I’ve lost it, ....lots of data on that page........I too found them too slow, but have not tried the -0 TBT,....I’ve tried these in the automotive world for different applications and found the release too slow holding voltage on the consumer as it tripped,....didn’t like that, especially with sensitive components that don’t react well to voltage drops,....hope that helps,..

Pat

@SteveH posted:

@harmonyards Pat, thanks for the tip about Octopart.com.  It looks like a good resource for finding who has what parts.  I'll look at it some more to see if I might be able to find a link to a cut-away for the Airpax.

For your notes, on the flip side, we found the reset to be very clean, zero lag, leap years ahead of any thermal breaker,...( normally used in our world) it’s the release we had issues with.....holding voltage on sensitive, and expensive fuel pumps in the performance world.......we were looking for alternatives to ATO’s and fast blows that don’t always react at their “advertised load rating” ........we’ve settled on Eaton breakers and found them a lot faster on the release side, .......I believe another fella mentioned them above as well,....

Pat

Arthur... I'm not speaking for you OR your wise observations.  However, electronics has grown since the early days of RADIOSHACK. So have the complexity of our trains.

I know there are many, a lot of my friends, that wish to go back to those early days where the most advanced electronic gadget was a door-bell circuit. Once again, those days are over and done.

To advance the hobby, a few of us not all, need to get our heads out of the sand.

@harmonyards posted:

For your notes, on the flip side, we found the reset to be very clean, zero lag, leap years ahead of any thermal breaker,...( normally used in our world) it’s the release we had issues with.....holding voltage on sensitive, and expensive fuel pumps in the performance world.......we were looking for alternatives to ATO’s and fast blows that don’t always react at their “advertised load rating” ........we’ve settled on Eaton breakers and found them a lot faster on the release side, .......I believe another fella mentioned them above as well,....

Pat

Pat, unless I'm misunderstanding your meaning, I think we might be talking apples, oranges, and bananas here on the time delay.  The other mention above was for a slow trip time Airpax with the number 2 in the second part of the model number ( PP11 - 2 - **** ).

There's also the "fast" delay option ( PP11 - 1 - **** ) with a trip curve that sounds like what you could be describing.

If you look closely at the picture in the original post, its a PP11 - 0 - 10.0 - OB -  V which is the instant fruit (I mean delay) . The  - 0 = "instant" PN designation Airpax breaker is supposed to disconnect the load in less than 0.001 second ( 1 millisecond ) if current flow to the load rises above its rating.

Instant Delay Air Pax

Do you think the ones you were using might have been the ( PP11 - 1 - **** ) "fast" that has a curve like this?

Fast Delay Air Pax

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  • Fast Delay Air Pax
  • Instant Delay Air Pax
Last edited by SteveH
@SteveH posted:

Pat, unless I'm misunderstanding your meaning, I think we might be talking apples, oranges, and bananas here on the time delay.  The other mention above was for a slow trip time Airpax with the number 2 in the second part of the model number ( PP11 - 2 - **** ).

There's also the "fast" delay option ( PP11 - 1 - **** ) with a trip curve that sounds like what you could be describing.

If you look closely at the picture in the original post, its a PP11 - 0 - 10.0 - OB -  V which is the instant fruit (I mean delay) . The  - 1 = "instant" PN designation Airpax breaker is supposed to disconnect the load in less than 0.1 second if current flow to the load rises to above about 135% of its rating.

Do you think the ones you were using might have been the "fast" that has a curve like this?

Fast Delay Air Pax

The -1 is the one we tried on a 12-14V circuit, ( 13.90 running ) on a 20 amp service,.... ....I believe you’re correct, we’re probably comparing apples to oranges,....when we forced a trip, and observed the drop out, it was not instant, almost as if the arc was holding load as it moved away from the contacts,.....we bought them since they were cheap, and  I could certainly cut one open if that’s the exercise of the thread,......  

Pat

@harmonyards posted:

The -1 is the one we tried on a 12-14V circuit, ( 13.90 running ) on a 20 amp service,.... ....I believe you’re correct, we’re probably comparing apples to oranges,....when we forced a trip, and observed the drop out, it was not instant, almost as if the arc was holding load as it moved away from the contacts,.....we bought them since they were cheap, and  I could certainly cut one open if that’s the exercise of the thread,......  

Pat

Pat that would be Great!

Having a look inside would certainly answer the main 2 of the 4 questions.

@SteveH posted:

Pat that would be Great!

Having a look inside would certainly answer the main 2 of the 4 questions.

When I go back to work on Monday I’ll grab the one that looks very similar to the one pictured at the top of this thread,...when my customers spend 900-1100 bucks on fuel pumps, they’re very interested in circuit protection ( obviously why) ......we designed an overkill circuit that consists of ATO fuse ( which most of us know can be pathological liars ) , breaker, and inertia breaker ( another Eaton product) for case of collision.....FoMoCo already uses the inertia breaker in circuit so we cheat like heck and borrow their plans,....😉

Pat

Steve I have enough knowledge about electrical to be dangerous and I have not heard arc shoots in twenty years.  I will try to answer your questions about that since you have waded into the area of serious circuit breakers.

A couple of simple observations. No such thing as an instantaneous breaker. The breaker has two pieces of metal and when bad things happen they open.  There is always an arc between the contacts until they are far enough apart. In large heavy duty breakers it takes a serious gap for the arc to stop. Hence the need for shoots. I would guess a minor factor in train applications.

Back  to your original questions go back to Pat and John, speed and the curves on time.

Back feed well we have had cases when motors turned into generators and that wreaked havoc but not a concern with train motors.









 

@rplst8 posted:

I couldn’t find anything in stock at Digikey or Mouser that was instantaneous from Eaton when I looked a few days ago, but this doc below has a cut away of their AR series breakers and they specifically talk about extinguishing grids to control arcing. Is that sort of the feature you were looking for @SteveH?

https://www.eaton.com/content/...eries-ca130003en.pdf

Ryan, than you for looking for a solution and the link.  Eaton's extinguishing grids do appear to perform the same or similar function as an Arc Chute and Arc Dissipation Plates.  I'm hoping we'll also get to see and understand what's inside the Airpax Snapac specifically and if it's any different from others.



@harmonyards Pat, thank you for offering to cut open one of your older Airpax breakers.  I look forward to seeing your pictures of it.



Cal, thank you for your insights and reply.  Please see my comments and questions below within your quote box.

@Caldwell posted:

Steve I have enough knowledge about electrical to be dangerous and I have not heard arc shoots in twenty years.  I will try to answer your questions about that since you have waded into the area of serious circuit breakers.

A couple of simple observations. No such thing as an instantaneous breaker. Yes that's absolutely true, these claim a trip time of 0.1 seconds = "Instant". That's why every time I have used that word I put it in quotes. The breaker has two pieces of metal and when bad things happen they open.  There is always an arc between the contacts until they are far enough apart. In large heavy duty breakers it takes a serious gap for the arc to stop. Hence the need for shoots. Understood  I would guess a minor factor in train applications. Probably so, but there is still an arc that would cause pitting on the contacts if not dealt with in some way.  These Airpax breakers have an endurance rating of "in excess of 50,000 cycles..." (which is reduced by higher voltages and current loads).  So, until Pat looks inside, we may not know exactly how these breakers absorb the arc energy.

Back  to your original questions go back to Pat and John  (John?), speed and the curves on time.  Not sure what you mean here, but I do understand the trip curves for the 3 delay types and my original questions are unrelated to time delays.  Would you please clarify what you're saying if unrelated to trip delay curve?

Back feed well we have had cases when motors turned into generators and that wreaked havoc but not a concern with train motors.  My understanding is that back feed can and does occur in both cases (just many orders of magnitude less in model trains).  In the case of a derailment, the generated voltage spikes can be much higher than normal operating voltage due to two or more motors' rapid field coil discharge currents.  Of course, this can be diminished when TVS diodes are strategically placed within the circuit (but TVS has been well covered elsewhere).

The back feed conditions I was trying to ask about were unclear.  What I'm wondering is:

Even though there are other very good reasons not to do so (and not the question being asked), are there any reasons why permanently connecting a 120 - 240V AC Hydraulic-Magnetic circuit breaker backwards (ie. line terminal connected to the load and vice versa) might diminish is rated service life (endurance = number of cycles before failure)?

and

Does a 120 - 240V AC Hydraulic-Magnetic breaker containing an Arc Chute dissipate a breaking arc current which might flow into the breaker from either Terminal (Load and/or Line sides) by routing the arc thorough the chute, regardless of which pole the current enters?

Thank you again to all who've contributed to this topic so far.

OK... a stupid question from an electronic idiot.

I have used the digi-key breakers for quite some time on my pre & post war transformers... and, apparently I am incredibly lucky as I have to date, never blown a board or compromised the functionalities therein.  I certainly must have crossed the derailment threshold to provide ample opportunities to attain a blown board.

Which breaker will trip first... the 7amp digi-key or the 10amp breaker discussed herein?

Excellent Thread BTW... THANK YOU!

Dennis, the 7A breaker you're talking about is a Potter & Brumfield W28-XQ1A-7 for use in slow-blow applications.  It uses a different Thermal Magnetic internal mechanism to operate than the Airpax.  The P&B is also heat dependent, where the Airpax isn't.

Potter and Brumfield Breaker Features

In the P&B, as the current flow through it rises above the rated trip value, it would be much slower to open the circuit than an Airpax so-called "instant" breaker with a comparable current rating.  Here is the Trip delay curve from the Potter & Brumfield W28 series datasheet:

Potter and Brumfield Trip curvejpg



I've not seen a trip delay curve for the breakers built into the PW ZWs (when they were new) but I'm guessing it's close to the same as the external circuit breakers you have.  If you're running TMCC, DCS or Lion chief equipment around the Christmas tree, some faster breakers, might be worth considering, (as well as an Adult proof railing ).  Postwar type Locos, might be fine as is.

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  • Potter and Brumfield Breaker Features
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Last edited by SteveH

@SteveH ....I've not seen a trip delay curve for the breakers built into the PW ZWs (when they were new) but I'm guessing it's close to the same as the external circuit breakers you have.  If you're running TMCC or Lion chief equipment around the Christmas tree, some faster breakers, might be worth considering, (as well as an Adult proof railing ).  Postwar type Locos, might be fine as is.

no need to worry about trip curves on PW ZW’s....when my stick welder fails out in the garage, I use my trusty ZW to weld things back together!..🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

even with the fastest breaker on earth, diode suppression still might be a good idea as a back up plan, to keep the harmful shot from heading in the wrong direction.....

Pat

Unfortunately I don’t have the knowledge to add to this very informative discussion, however when all is said and done it would be great to have a list of components and a diagram on how to incorporate these items.  That would include breakers, diodes and tvs’s.         Thanks to all the knowledgeable people for making this post possible.

@Keith k posted:

Unfortunately I don’t have the knowledge to add to this very informative discussion, however when all is said and done it would be great to have a list of components and a diagram on how to incorporate these items.  That would include breakers, diodes and tvs’s.         Thanks to all the knowledgeable people for making this post possible.

Keith, that's a good suggestion. However, it might be difficult to come up with a one size fits all diagram, for all the possible breaker applications encountered in a model railroad layout.  But there are some general points that could be addressed in your suggestion.  Also, FWIW the diodes Pat mentioned are the TVS (Transient Voltage Suppression diode).

Last edited by SteveH

Thank you much guys!

I run some Conventional.  My Legacy & TMCC Locos run via Legacy (no tiu/aiu/dcc/dcs etc).  I guess I've just been really, really lucky through all the derails with the TMCC & Legacy Locos.  I did grab a ZW-L that provides track power to the new permanent layout.  I'll keep an eye on this thread and upgrade the protection on the pre/post transformers once you guys nail this down.  Thanks again for your great work and service to the community.

As an experiment, I set up my layout about 10 years ago with a "textbook" TMCC/Legacy arrangement, each 180 watt brick is connected to a Legacy Powermaster, using the recommended Lionel cables and fuses, with absolutely no other breakers, fuses, TVSS diodes or anything. No electronic failures so far despite the typical share of derailments and tools on the track. I run Legacy, TMCC, Lionchief Plus and a tiny bit of conventional.

The protection in the 180 watt bricks is fast, but the Legacy Powermaster is even faster, it is almost impossible to trip the breaker in the brick; the Powermaster almost always trips first.

No pre-war/post-war transformers involved. Personally, I think pre-war/post-war transformers are the root of a lot more electronic evil than is generally appreciated.

YMMV.

You're probably right, I run with the PH180 bricks through the TIU and on to the tracks.  I get even more protection as each TIU channel has a TVS on the output.

We've also run our modular club that way since it was formed about ten years ago.  We don't have electronics dropping like flies, even though that environment has generous amounts of shorts, bad connections, derailments, etc.  If you think you have track or derailment issues on a fixed layout, try clamping 20+ modular sections together with a couple of C-clamps each and running on that!   Yes, we also have lots of tools and other debris on the tracks from setup and repair before the show, that takes it toll.

After cutting open one of the 10A "Instant" and doing some testing with it, my questions have been answered.  I've updated the first post in this thread with these findings and the internal pics of it, if anyone else might be interested.  There are also links to where the instant series can be purchased, as of now.  The 7.5 and 10A are in short supply.

Link Back To Top

Thanks for that , about what I expected, but now I know for sure what's in them.

About what I expected too, but the tiny U-shaped arc chute is cute.  It's also interesting to me that the coil assembly is stationary.  IMO a good compact design for low current applications.

It's also noteworthy, that when connected directly across the ZW outputs inline with an analog Ammeter,  the 10A instant breakers (tested both with 1 and 2 connected in series) tripped (simultaneously) as soon as I barely opened the ZW throttle.  The needle on the ammeter barely moved, as should be expected.

Also tested with a with a 5A fast blow fuse in one of the test leads, and if the throttle was rapidly opened to about 12V, the breaker would trip leaving the fuse intact.  At 6V ( and ~ 30 ohms in series) the fuse blew first.

Last edited by SteveH
@Windy City posted:

I am just getting back into the hobby and have several Allen Bradley model 1492-GH100 single pole circuit breaker.

I have no idea who recommended them.  Please share any information.  

Unable so far to find much info on these, except that they are thermal magnetic and rather pricey. No data found on their trip characteristics.

Maybe if you were to Post a new topic indicating that you're looking for info on these specific breakers, that might grab more attention.

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