George Stolz said:
I have always been under the impression that an arcing ground fault is generally of short duration, and the primary concern that they present is the immediate and sudden superheating around the fault, resulting in burns of personnel. ...
George -
Here is some background, a couple of quotes from IEEE Buff book 242. They cover both solidly grounded which is what I think you were discussing, and ungrounded, which is an over voltage issue:
Ieee 242 8.2.2 Solid Grounding
One disadvantage of the solidly grounded 480 V system involves the high magnitude of destructive, arcing ground-fault currents that can occur. However, if these currents are promptly interrupted, the equipment damage is kept to acceptable levels. While low-voltage systems can be resistance-grounded, resistance grounding restricts the use of line-to-neutral loads.
Ieee 242 8.2.5 Ungrounded
Ungrounded low-voltage systems (see Figure 8-5a and Figure 8-5b) employ ground detectors (e.g., lamps or voltmeters connected from each phase to ground) to indicate a ground fault. These detectors show the existence of a ground on the system and identify the faulted phase, but do not locate the ground, which could be anywhere on the entire system. The system operates with the ground fault acting as the system ground point. The ground-fault current that flows is the capacitive charging current of the system, generally only a few amperes.
If this ground fault is intermittent or allowed to continue, the system could be subjected to possible severe overvoltages to ground, which can be as high as six or eight times phase voltage. Such overvoltages can puncture insulation and result in additional ground faults. These overvoltages are caused by repetitive charging of the system capacitance or by resonance between the system capacitance and the inductances of equipment in the system.
George Stolz said:
...Is the voltage potential on bonded parts a serious concern for shock potential? ...
I don't think so. My thinking is that if all of the non-current carrying metal parts, building steel are grounded, then little shock potential exists.
George Stolz said:
...Are some arcing ground faults sustained for more than a few seconds? ...
Shouldn't. Relays are available to take these off-line quickly. Like a few cycles or less - (I think).
carl