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Your cart is empty.Siemens introduces the new simple, spacious and secure Plug-on neutral load centers with electronic breakers. The Siemens Plug-On Neutral Combination Type AFCI breaker detects arcing faults (an unintentional arcing condition in a circuit) that standard circuit breakers are unable to detect. This AFCI circuit breaker is the same, reliable design, without the pigtail, specifically design for the Plug-On Neutral Load Centers. These breakers now only have a single load lug. The branch neutral conductor is returned to the neutral terminal bar for simpler and quicker wiring.
Edvis Hayrapetian
Reviewed in the United States on June 18, 2024
Works... most importantly (in my opinion) was green-lighted vis-a-vis inspection.
Vlad Vinarskiy
Reviewed in the United States on April 8, 2024
good product and price
Ecosmart Eléctrical Service
Reviewed in the United States on April 24, 2024
Llego muy bien facil instalacion y funciona bien
Yesplease1234
Reviewed in the United States on May 27, 2023
These breakers work well for existing panels that have three wire homeruns, but the description states that there are combination AFCI which I thought they would be Afci/GFCI protection, but it is not. In a residential house. Most lighting circuits are 15 Amps. Besides that the breakers are great and thank god they finallyCame out with them. I just need them to come out with the dual function a FCI/GFCI breakers hopefully soon.
J. Kesselman
Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2021
The snap-in neutral connection does simplify installation -- *IF* you have a breaker box/load center which supports that feature. I, stupidly, didn't check before ordering and it turns out ours does not; I should have ordered the QAF version (with a pigtail wire for neutral) rather than QAFN.Oops. Not the product's fault.AFCI has been called "the cheapest and most effective fire insurance you can buy" -- IF it works for you. Since it senses arcing across loose connections, worn-out switches and motors which spark a bit can trigger it. Probably a great thing to install in new houses (and now required in many places, I believe), but debatable as retrofit unless you're willing to make the effort to track down and repair any not-really-working-correctly devices that it complains about. Whether that's "oversensitive" depends on your priorities, patience, and budget.
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