Sorry yes primary H0. I'll make the correction thank you.Did you mean primary H0?
I believe that only applies when the transformer has a set of delta windings on it (secondary or tertiary). As that would enforce the condition that the sum of the primary L-N voltages is 0, by drawing extra current on the primary if necessary. Which is a problem if the primary system at the transformer is not perfectly voltage balanced.Even with a Wye primary you do not connect a neutral to it
I'm pretty sure even ungrounded, without a neutral you need to tie the primary and secondary H0-X0 to keep the voltages stable.I believe that only applies when the transformer has a set of delta windings on it (secondary or tertiary). As that would enforce the condition that the sum of the primary L-N voltages is 0, by drawing extra current on the primary if necessary. Which is a problem if the primary system at the transformer is not perfectly voltage balanced.
As to the Yg-Yg question, the primary wye system's neutral would be earthed only at its source, not at this transformer. The secondary wye could be installed as an SDS, in which case you connect the secondary's neutral to a GEC to earth it, and install an SBJ on the secondary side. Or it could be grounded directly by connecting the primary neutral to the secondary neutral, making it not an SDS. The latter has a longer fault clearing path for ground faults (relying on the MBJ/SBJ on the primary wye system). Either way the primary and secondary neutrals get interconnected, either through the GES for the SDS, or directly.
Cheers, Wayne
I don't think it is advisable to leave the primary Y totally ungrounded if the secondary Y is grounded unless there is a tertiary delta winding in the transformer to supply current for secondary ground faults.Even with a Wye primary you do not connect a neutral to it and you do not ground the primary H0. (fixed error)
You might be correct. Can you explain this further as it relates to the OP?I don't think it is advisable to leave the primary Y totally ungrounded if the secondary Y is grounded unless there is a tertiary delta winding in the transformer to supply current for secondary ground faults.
In case 2, you would not both install an SBJ and directly connect the primary neutral to the secondary neutral. That puts primary neutral current on the grounding system, as it puts the SBJ in parallel with the MBJ. So you do one or the other, to get an SDS or not.Case 2, I am bringing neutral, tying H0 and X0 together
If its not an SDS, then a new system is not 'created' so would the ECG and Neutral of entire fault clearing path of the 208 'side' not need to be sized to minimum size per 250.122 for the 208 side? this would in effect be a TN-S - TN-S wye.As to the Yg-Yg question, the primary wye system's neutral would be earthed only at its source, not at this transformer. ... /... it could be grounded directly by connecting the primary neutral to the secondary neutral, making it not an SDS. The latter has a longer fault clearing path for ground faults (relying on the MBJ/SBJ on the primary wye system). Either way the primary and secondary neutrals get interconnected, either through the GES for the SDS, or directly.
Presumably your first writing of 208 was meant to be 480, and I am responding as such.If its not an SDS, then a new system is not 'created' so would the ECG and Neutral of entire fault clearing path of the 208 'side' not need to be sized to minimum size per 250.122 for the 208 side?
