- Location
- New Jersey
- Occupation
- Journeyman Electrician
We have several 3Ø, 208-4160 WYE/Delta step-up transformers. How are these typically grounded, corner ground or are they typically installed as an ungrounded Delta?
Bump, have I finally stumped the engineers on this forum?
There are 4-4000 amp services in the building all 208Y/120. There are about 10-208 to 4160 step up and another 10-4160 to 208y/120 step down tranformers, all step ups are setup as ungrounded. The step ups are Wye/Delta and the step downs are Delta/Wye.
We have several 3Ø, 208-4160 WYE/Delta step-up transformers. How are these typically grounded, corner ground or are they typically installed as an ungrounded Delta?
In years gone past, I used to recommend that delta secondaries be ungrounded when they feed a single circuit and corner-grounded when they feed multiple circuits.
What are you planning to do for a ground detection scheme? Will you have any protective relaying on the 4160V?
250.21(B) only requires ground detection for systems operating at 1000 volts or less. I don't see anything in Part X of 250 requiring ground detection for the higher voltage systems.The 4160 secondary feeds a fused disconnect and as far as I can see that's it. Is ground detection required?
250.21(B) only requires ground detection for systems operating at 1000 volts or less. I don't see anything in Part X of 250 requiring ground detection for the higher voltage systems.
That's what I thought as well, seems to be a design issue not a code issue
How does it work without a ground? has to be in the top five questions of all time. I can understand common folk asking that, but electricians should know better..... Sometimes electricians cannot understand how a system could be installed that is not grounded especially at 4160 volts.
This came up the other day because someone asked me about running GEC's for these step-up transformers. When I took a closer look at the set up I realized that this was designed as an ungrounded system which yielded some strange looks. Sometimes electricians cannot understand how a system could be installed that is not grounded especially at 4160 volts.
Even though you arent grounding a conductor of the system, Dont you still need a GEC for the metal parts?
I think the grounding electrode system and GECs are required. The only real difference between the rules for a grounded and ungrounded transformer is that the ungrounded one does not have a system bonding jumper.This came up the other day because someone asked me about running GEC's for these step-up transformers. When I took a closer look at the set up I realized that this was designed as an ungrounded system which yielded some strange looks. Sometimes electricians cannot understand how a system could be installed that is not grounded especially at 4160 volts.