Rick Christopherson
Senior Member
Edit: Sorry for the tone, but I knew someone was going to bring this up sometime today, and I was a little over-prepared for it.
Why?
Because if your primary (the POCO) lost a phase, then the primary center-tap will get slammed to the high-voltage of the remaining (non-lost) primary phase voltage, and it will take the secondary center-tap with it. All of the downstream customers of this transformer will suddenly have primary-voltage on their neutral conductor. Since all of their mains are bonded, their grounding system will also be carrying primary-side voltage.
Anyone more than a couple feet away (aka the Shells mentions previously) from their grounding electrode, yet touching both an earthen-ground (aka concrete floor or grass) while also touching a grounding/grounded conductor of the dwelling's electrical system will experience near-full primary-side voltage across their body. They will be toast!
I sure as heck hope you're not installing systems with a primary-side center-tap jumpered to the secondary-side center-tap, because with a few exceptions, doing so will kill someone. (P.S. The NEC defines this a non-seperately-derived-system.) Even those exceptions will still have some exceptions that can still kill someone.Rick you might want to re-think this statement.....................
..................... since most utility's bond both the primary and secondary neutrals to an electrode at the pole..............
Why?
Because if your primary (the POCO) lost a phase, then the primary center-tap will get slammed to the high-voltage of the remaining (non-lost) primary phase voltage, and it will take the secondary center-tap with it. All of the downstream customers of this transformer will suddenly have primary-voltage on their neutral conductor. Since all of their mains are bonded, their grounding system will also be carrying primary-side voltage.
Anyone more than a couple feet away (aka the Shells mentions previously) from their grounding electrode, yet touching both an earthen-ground (aka concrete floor or grass) while also touching a grounding/grounded conductor of the dwelling's electrical system will experience near-full primary-side voltage across their body. They will be toast!
This is why I keep bringing up Ohm's Law! It makes no difference how high the resistance, if there is no current flowing, then Ohm's Law dictates that there can be zero voltage (or more specifically, zero voltage-difference). Several of you have made this statement, but you all assumed that there was high current (aka fault current) that was not part of the discussion. Not all voltage elevations on the grounding system are the result of a direct fault.But my response is that any voltage placed upon the water pipe will not be brought down to the potential of Earth because of the resistance of the Earth in the close proximity of the water pipe, which will be to high to ever do this..............
No! As I have stated many times in the past; electrons do not care where they came from or where they are going. They only care about a difference in voltage, regardless what caused that difference in voltage. When you think of electricity as only following a return to source then you loose sight of the many other aspects that control the flow of electrons.I think for the most part we are on the same page but we must remember that the current is not trying to return to Earth, it is trying to return back to source.......
Last edited: