LighningRod
Member
- Location
- Indiana
Hello All:
I am an electrical engineer and am new to this forum. My area of study is primary solid state low voltage hardware so I need some help from some power guys. My friend has a very odd problem that I am trying to help him to understand. Perhaps I can get some ideas from all of you. Simply, a couple years ago, someone drove their car into a utility pole a few blocks from my friend's home. I am not sure exactly what happened, but I was told that when the pole came down, the ground was "energized" for some period of time. I think this is a 7.2KV system.
All of the homes on that side of the road experienced instantaneous high voltage damage to their appliances, etc. It was severe. Since the original event a couple years ago, my friend continues to experience damage consistent with a several thousand volt arc flash. I see this is receptacles, switches, appliances, circuit board, exposed branch circuit wires, etc. Products and switches have been replaced several times and the arc flash insult continues. His wiring passed megger testing to 1.1KV.
Since I know that voltage of the magnitude that can generate such damage can only come from the utility, I am trying to figure out what had gone wrong since the initial faulting of the utility lines. For example, could his pad mount transformer now be intermittent and primary is somehow being shorted directly the the secondary, albeit randomly and intermittently? How about the neutral from the utility as connected to the primary side of his pad mount? Could that be overstressed, degraded and compromised?
Can anyone help me with a scenario that would allow a multiple KV surge to randomly energize the branch circuits of this home? Also, he reports being shocked when turning on some switches. He also reports dimming of lights and multiple outages.
Look forward to your responses!
I am an electrical engineer and am new to this forum. My area of study is primary solid state low voltage hardware so I need some help from some power guys. My friend has a very odd problem that I am trying to help him to understand. Perhaps I can get some ideas from all of you. Simply, a couple years ago, someone drove their car into a utility pole a few blocks from my friend's home. I am not sure exactly what happened, but I was told that when the pole came down, the ground was "energized" for some period of time. I think this is a 7.2KV system.
All of the homes on that side of the road experienced instantaneous high voltage damage to their appliances, etc. It was severe. Since the original event a couple years ago, my friend continues to experience damage consistent with a several thousand volt arc flash. I see this is receptacles, switches, appliances, circuit board, exposed branch circuit wires, etc. Products and switches have been replaced several times and the arc flash insult continues. His wiring passed megger testing to 1.1KV.
Since I know that voltage of the magnitude that can generate such damage can only come from the utility, I am trying to figure out what had gone wrong since the initial faulting of the utility lines. For example, could his pad mount transformer now be intermittent and primary is somehow being shorted directly the the secondary, albeit randomly and intermittently? How about the neutral from the utility as connected to the primary side of his pad mount? Could that be overstressed, degraded and compromised?
Can anyone help me with a scenario that would allow a multiple KV surge to randomly energize the branch circuits of this home? Also, he reports being shocked when turning on some switches. He also reports dimming of lights and multiple outages.
Look forward to your responses!