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There should be information on the relay itself. Boettchers in Beloit handle Cutler Hammer (Eaton) products. You may be able to pull the relay and take it to them for an exact replacement.
The circuit breaker must be turned to the "off" position first from the middle position, and then to the "on" position. The cutler hammer arc breakers carry a lifetime warranty so if it will not reset you may want to contact the manufacture.
Line voltage (source power) goes to the lugs on the top and load (goes to the device) is on the bottom. If it is designed for single-phase power (with a neutral), there should be an isolated block with lugs for neutral, but if it is not, just get an inline lug (available at a hardware store like Home Depot) to connect your neutrals and then insulate it with electrical or rubber insulating tape. Then you will need to bond your grounds (from the source AND to the device) to the can.
For 240 if it is a single pole breaker then no. You need a double pole breaker or 2 single breakers , one above the other, connect the red wire to one and the black wire to the other. this way you are drawing from both legs. hope this helps you...
Probably easier and about the same price to just buy a shunt trip main breaker. IIRC, code usually requires that anyway.
As far as the c25dnd330, it's just a regular 3 pole contactor, each pole is good for 30 amps. The three poles are L1,2,&3>>>T1,2,&3. The other two contacts are the control coil. I believe your model is 120 volt (most are)....the voltage should be stamped somewhere near the contacts.
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