Hoping someone can confirm my suspicions before I go back and sketch out (and relearn) my sequence components for this.
This is a real issue I'm having at client's site. We didn't design this. We were brought in to figure out what's happening.
SP = 480V Service Panel, main bonding jumper is installed
TR = 408V to 208V transformer, wye-wye
DP = 208V Distribution Panel, 'system bonding jumper' is installed
Current setup goes:
(480V utility service)-----(SP)-----(TR)-----(DP)----(208V loads)
What it looks like they did is land the neutral on both the H0 and X0 sides of the transformer (going to their respective panels, SP and DP). I don't believe they should have landed the one on H0 because now it's not a separately derived system. I see it as essentially a Yg-Yg transformer since there's a N-G bond at both panels, although there isn't one at the transformer, on either side, as far as I can tell.
That might not be a big deal to have it not be an SDS, and preferred in some cases, but what I think is happening is that the main 480V breaker in SP is "seeing" all of the single phase 208V loads or imbalances as a ground fault and they're getting occasional trips in that main CB in SP on ground fault.
The GF setting is at 500A, and that's what's tripping, so I initially thought it was real/significant issue they were having. But maybe it's a design issue. Tripping seems to mostly occur when utility service is lost and then restored.
Can someone please confirm (or correct) my theory here that imbalances at 208V could be seen as GF at the 480V main because of the grounding/bonding scenario used with the transformer?
Quick edit: I named the title what I did because I think they should remove the connection to H0 and make it Y-Yg transformer which would then create an SDS for the 208V side.
This is a real issue I'm having at client's site. We didn't design this. We were brought in to figure out what's happening.
SP = 480V Service Panel, main bonding jumper is installed
TR = 408V to 208V transformer, wye-wye
DP = 208V Distribution Panel, 'system bonding jumper' is installed
Current setup goes:
(480V utility service)-----(SP)-----(TR)-----(DP)----(208V loads)
What it looks like they did is land the neutral on both the H0 and X0 sides of the transformer (going to their respective panels, SP and DP). I don't believe they should have landed the one on H0 because now it's not a separately derived system. I see it as essentially a Yg-Yg transformer since there's a N-G bond at both panels, although there isn't one at the transformer, on either side, as far as I can tell.
That might not be a big deal to have it not be an SDS, and preferred in some cases, but what I think is happening is that the main 480V breaker in SP is "seeing" all of the single phase 208V loads or imbalances as a ground fault and they're getting occasional trips in that main CB in SP on ground fault.
The GF setting is at 500A, and that's what's tripping, so I initially thought it was real/significant issue they were having. But maybe it's a design issue. Tripping seems to mostly occur when utility service is lost and then restored.
Can someone please confirm (or correct) my theory here that imbalances at 208V could be seen as GF at the 480V main because of the grounding/bonding scenario used with the transformer?
Quick edit: I named the title what I did because I think they should remove the connection to H0 and make it Y-Yg transformer which would then create an SDS for the 208V side.

