TwoBlocked
Senior Member
- Location
- Bradford County, PA
- Occupation
- Industrial Electrician
Got this resistance sintering process using ungrounded secondary transformers with ground fault detection. 7500 amps, 180 VAC, single phase. One or two of the three banks is normally running in a batch system. As you can imagine, there's induced voltage/current going on probably in every bit of steel in the room.
One bank has been occasionally showing partial ground faults. When trying to troubleshoot using a megger (both digital and crank) the conductive parts show dead grounds. Using a digital ohmmeter, will get both positive and negative readings depending on which lead is taken to ground. The numerical difference is around 500k ohms (like +200k and -300k).
Anybody experience this sort of thing? Could it be some sort of partial inductive grounding on one leg?
One bank has been occasionally showing partial ground faults. When trying to troubleshoot using a megger (both digital and crank) the conductive parts show dead grounds. Using a digital ohmmeter, will get both positive and negative readings depending on which lead is taken to ground. The numerical difference is around 500k ohms (like +200k and -300k).
Anybody experience this sort of thing? Could it be some sort of partial inductive grounding on one leg?