Recently I built a demo that fed 240 volts into the secondary of a conventional wet transformer, 120/240 - 12470Y/7240. I wanted primary voltage to feed back into a MV regulator to show operation and test methods for training. I had visited with folks at another utility that had built their high pot booth and discussed the problems they had run across putting it all together. The problem was that if the neutral was connected to the center tap of the secondary, the breaker protecting the 240 would always trip on magnetic. They pulled the neutral from the secondary coil, served the transformer with 240 only and the backfeed produced the MV 7240 as desired. I built mine using the 240 only and had no problems. Today a group called because they are building a new arcing demo and could not keep their 240 breaker from tripping. I advised them to take the neutral out of the low side and then all worked fine. I have had my hands in many transformers over the years and know this 120/240 volt transformer uses two 120 volt coils in series with a center tap for the neutral. We preach daily that backfeed will kill you because the low voltage goes through the transformer and energizes the primary. Been saying this for years.
Why does the neutral connected to the center tap of the 120/240 coil cause this problem when we backfeed?
I have drawn this out but still can't explain it.
Why does the neutral connected to the center tap of the 120/240 coil cause this problem when we backfeed?
I have drawn this out but still can't explain it.