Barjack
Member
- Location
- St. Petersburg, FL
The establishment in question has a 3 phase 120/208 wye service. The main disconnect is feeding a 3 phase panel. A 2 pole breaker is feeding from this panel with a neutral to a single phase sub panel in a pool pit. This panel is feeding 2 single phase 208-230V pump motors, 120V pool light, 120V pit light, 120/208-230 ice machine, and 120V area lighting and convenience receptacles.
After repairing a bad connection in the junction box containing the feeders to this sub panel, I put my amp probe on the feeders to check current.
With everything running:
L1=34A
L2=24A
N=10A
Then shut off all 2 pole 208-230V loads:
L1=8A
L2=2A
N=6A
Shouldn't the neutral current be more like 7A? My thinking is that since this sub panel is using 2 of 3 phases sharing a neutral, shouldn't the wye neutral calculation work using L1=8A, L2=2A, and L3=0A?
I realize I'm probably missing something very basic here, but I just can't wrap my head around it. I even temporarily rearranged the breakers to change the loads, and they still acted like single phase.
After repairing a bad connection in the junction box containing the feeders to this sub panel, I put my amp probe on the feeders to check current.
With everything running:
L1=34A
L2=24A
N=10A
Then shut off all 2 pole 208-230V loads:
L1=8A
L2=2A
N=6A
Shouldn't the neutral current be more like 7A? My thinking is that since this sub panel is using 2 of 3 phases sharing a neutral, shouldn't the wye neutral calculation work using L1=8A, L2=2A, and L3=0A?
I realize I'm probably missing something very basic here, but I just can't wrap my head around it. I even temporarily rearranged the breakers to change the loads, and they still acted like single phase.