Nelson electric
Christian
- Location
- Sacramento, ca
- Occupation
- Electrician
I am looking for help in a LED highbay retro.
I swapped out 21 out of 22 400 watt metal hyliade fixtures with 21 JEBL 80CRI LED highbay. (We are waiting for the 22nd one to be delivered.) The lights are divided into 3 circuits coming from a 3-pole lighting contactor, controlled by a set of 3-way toggle switches. All fixtures are 277 volts, measuring 278 - 279 volts neutral to hot leg. When the switch was turned on all 21 fixtures went out, with blinking strobe-like as they went out.
The switch was turned off and disconnected the last 2 fixtures and turned the switch back on and was reading 344 volts neutral to hot leg. Which, the 344 volts fried the capacitor inside the fixtures.
All other new JEBL fixtures on 2 other 3-pole lighting contactors were on at the same time, being fed from same panel, with no interruption or apparent voltage spike due to they did not burn out at the same time.
This isolated the 3-pole circuit from the others, from the lighting contactor to the fixtures.
All 3 circuits are sharing the same neutral. (30 year old installation).
There was one 400 watt fixture left on the 3-pole circuit.
Is this a neutral issue?
How else could there be an increase from 277 volts to 344 volts?
Thank you four your help in trying to understand the issue.
I swapped out 21 out of 22 400 watt metal hyliade fixtures with 21 JEBL 80CRI LED highbay. (We are waiting for the 22nd one to be delivered.) The lights are divided into 3 circuits coming from a 3-pole lighting contactor, controlled by a set of 3-way toggle switches. All fixtures are 277 volts, measuring 278 - 279 volts neutral to hot leg. When the switch was turned on all 21 fixtures went out, with blinking strobe-like as they went out.
The switch was turned off and disconnected the last 2 fixtures and turned the switch back on and was reading 344 volts neutral to hot leg. Which, the 344 volts fried the capacitor inside the fixtures.
All other new JEBL fixtures on 2 other 3-pole lighting contactors were on at the same time, being fed from same panel, with no interruption or apparent voltage spike due to they did not burn out at the same time.
This isolated the 3-pole circuit from the others, from the lighting contactor to the fixtures.
All 3 circuits are sharing the same neutral. (30 year old installation).
There was one 400 watt fixture left on the 3-pole circuit.
Is this a neutral issue?
How else could there be an increase from 277 volts to 344 volts?
Thank you four your help in trying to understand the issue.