Alwayslearningelec
Senior Member
- Location
- NJ
- Occupation
- Estimator
Yeah, I saw LP and assumed lighting panel which would make sense for 480Y/277 volts.It could be a dedicated isolation transformer. Maybe the load is sensitive to power quality issues.
But based on it being a called an LP panel, I agree with infinity.
Isolation transformer with the same primary and secondary voltages
No, you probably do not, you likely have 480 Delta coming in, which is why they added this transformer.have 277/480 coming in
The is a delta/wye transformer. I don't see a 3 wire 480 volt delta circuit as being the same voltage as a 4 wire 480Y/277 volt circuit.
Still could be a delta wye, even if the incoming is 48/277. Most likely though a delta 480 volt service. The note we do not see probably explains it.The is a delta/wye transformer. I don't see a 3 wire 480 volt delta circuit as being the same voltage as a 4 wire 480Y/277 volt circuit.
FIFY.Still could be a delta wye, even if the incoming is 480/277.
The feeder is only 3 wires so it is only 480V, even though it may be coming from a 4 wire source.Wow this is confusing.
FIFY.
Even if the service is 480/277V and the transformer is wye-wye, the neutral on the primary side should not be connected.
As I mentioned in Post #6, I have seen that fairly often where the available fault current at the 480 panel is extremely high and transfgotmer is added to provide a source of power to address low SCCR or breaker AIC.If it is a 480/277 source, then the question is, why is there a transformer to feed a “lighting panel”? You already had 277V for the lighting…
Not at all. Look at the symbols on the far left. It's a delta-wye unit, just as Don said in post #8.Wow this is confusing.