We currently have two cabinets of equipment at our datacenter, and each cabinet is served by two 30A circuits. The facility is relatively new, and each circuit is (supposedly) redundant at the source.
Most of our equipment uses redundant power supplies, but some devices not deemed super important have been left without redundant power, so that our mission crit equipment can continue humming if we lost an entire circuit.
However, based on best guess (which includes accounting for a 20% redundant-to-non-redundant efficiency improvement based on some prior reading), two of the four circuits would probably be over the 80% mark in this scenario. Specifically, I would have estimated readings of 21A, 24A, 25.5A, and 28A.
Are loads such as these acceptable for a disaster scenario like this? I don't know what it would take to lose a redundant circuit, but I'm trying to plan for it.
I'm not an electrician and certainly shouldn't be considered as an authority on such matters, but I'll jump in anyhow.
There are different kinds of circuit breakers (thermal, thermal magnetic, others). They behave differently under different types of loads. (I've seen sketchy welders that draw 22A that don't blow a residential 15A circuit because it only ran for short bursts, for instance).
Also there are "80%" and "100%" circuit breakers. A 80% CB may blow if you are over 80% load for more than 3 hours. I've also been told that circuit breakers aren't typically tested as though they're precision devices - they don't go through a test suite where it passes QA if it can run at 99% of the rated load and blows at 100% of the rated load. Instead, they're tested such that they pass if they don't blow at 80% load and do blow at 100% load, and what happens in between is ... undefined.
Another issue is that you may be at 82% of max load now, but what if the DC is really hot? Often servers have fans that change speed depending on temperature -- and when they spin faster they'll draw more power, so now instead of 82% of max load you're at 88% of max load. When things go wrong they tend to go wrong in surprising and unexpected ways.
So, depending on the equipment, probably you want to size circuits to either have non-critical stuff on them or make sure that they're under 80% under all scenarios.
http://www.wincogen.com/CB