480V corner ground issues?

Status
Not open for further replies.

chris kennedy

Senior Member
Location
Miami Fla.
Occupation
60 yr old tool twisting electrician
Morning all

I am currently installing 3 new customer supplied transformers, 480 delta to 240 delta. These are reverse wired, 240V primary to 480V secondary.
H2 is grounded. These transformers each supply an individual control cabinet.

Other than the obvious higher voltage to ground, what are the drawbacks of these systems?

To head off some questions;

Nothing is connected to X6
H1 brown, H2 grey and H3 yellow
All 3 loads are 3Ø 3 wire industrial laundry control cabinets built in 1996

Thanks
 
Are there VFDs or other electronics? Filter capacitors are often connected L-G and so don't often play well with non-wye systems.
 
Good question. There is a new conveyor system not yet on site being connected to one of the cabinets. Good chance of VFD there.
 
Are there VFDs or other electronics? Filter capacitors are often connected L-G and so don't often play well with non-wye systems.
Do you mean L-G rather than line to neutral?
I don't recall using LN but that would just our usual practice.
 
I’ve done that before, but all motor loads were standard contactored loads, but as Jreaf said, if it’s freq drives, I would be concerned. It might be cheaper for the customer to pay the restocking fee, and get a transformer you know will work versus replacing drives.
 
I’ve done that before, but all motor loads were standard contactored loads, but as Jreaf said, if it’s freq drives, I would be concerned. It might be cheaper for the customer to pay the restocking fee, and get a transformer you know will work versus replacing drives.
Or if there is just one or two small drives, put a Drive Isolation Transformer ahead of them. 480 primary, 480/277 secondary, with X0 grounded.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top