46 CFR §111.54-1
Verified against eCFR.gov as of June 20, 2026View official text on eCFR.gov ↗
- (a)Each circuit breaker must—
- (1)Meet the general provision of Article 240 of NFPA 70 or IEC 60092-202:2016 (both incorporated by reference; see § 110.10-1 of this subchapter) as appropriate;
- (2)Meet subpart 111.55; and
- (3)Have an interrupting rating sufficient to interrupt the maximum asymmetrical short-circuit current available at the point of application.
- (b)No molded-case circuit breaker may be used in any circuit having a nominal voltage of more than 600 volts (1,000 volts for a circuit containing a circuit breaker manufactured to the standards of the IEC). Each molded-case circuit breaker must meet section 9 and marine supplement SA of ANSI/UL 489 or IEC 60947-2:2019 (both incorporated by reference; see § 110.10-1 of this subchapter), except as noted in paragraph (e) of this section.
- (c)Each circuit breaker, other than a molded-case one, that is for use in any of the following systems must meet the following requirements:
- (1)An alternating-current system having a nominal voltage of 600 volts or less (1,000 volts for such a system with circuit breakers manufactured to the standards of the IEC) must meet (all incorporated by reference; see § 110.10-1 of this subchapter):
- (2)A direct-current system of 3,000 volts or less (1,500 volts or less for such a system with circuit breakers manufactured to the standards of the IEC) must meet IEEE C37.14 or IEC 60947-2:2019 (both incorporated by reference; see § 110.10-1 of this subchapter).
- (3)An alternating-current system having a nominal voltage greater than 600 volts (or greater than 1,000 volts for IEC standard circuit breakers) must meet (all incorporated by reference; see § 110.10-1 of this subchapter):
- (d)A circuit breaker must not:
- (e)Each circuit breaker located in an engineroom, boilerroom, or machinery space must be calibrated for a 50 degree C ambient temperature. If the circuit breaker is in an environmentally controlled machinery control room where provisions are made for ensuring an ambient temperature of 40 degree C or less, a circuit breaker must have at least the standard 40 degrees C ambient temperature calibration.