Scenario: 3 phase 120/208 from pole which has transformers provided by utility company. Brown outs occur after heavy rain, building is in flood zone and at sea level. building is 55 years old. all underground conduits are rigid with no grounds and sharing neutrals. provided new 200 amp overhead service and 2 new load centers. provided 2 new ground rods and eventually added a 3rd.
building works fine on gen set which was brought in roughly 3 months ago as every time we go back on utility power brown outs occur again and in fact knock down traffic lights and a drug store across the road a block away. the traffic lights are on single phase portion of the transformers but the drug store has its own transformer from what I've noticed. during the brown out I noticed A phase was reading 60v B and C phases were around 170 volts. then A and C phases swapped and then C was 60 v. Utility company was called out to site and at the transformers they read proper voltages however, 15 ft down the line they were reading what I was the 60/170/170. Also was reading 15 amps on my ground. So I went ahead and re-fed 90 percent of the overhead lights and some other problematic outlets .
It definitely helped clear up my grounds. Also in doing so gave some of the groupings their own neutrals but still no ground wire. the brown outs dont happen all the time they are usually at higher load draws(low tide seems to happening as well) and then the gen set gets hooked up again so the facility can function (government building so I can't leave on utility for too long because they have to stay open.) We did ohm reading on ground rods my new ones were at 1 ohm utility is at 15 ohms, all within range of the 25 ohm rule.
All along the lights would drop for a split second when a/c unit kicks on. Yesterday I went up and took amp readings on the phases (3 phase 120/208 no neutral) I read ... A 45 amps/B38 Amps/C37 amps.
My question is this after all this work that's been done is it possible for the a/c unit to have been causing the issue all along. I find it hard to believe that an unbalanced load could cause brown out and push back on utility power. Oh and the reason I brought up the sea level thought was I kept reading at different times of the day (amps on ground, load amps) and it seemed to coincide with low tides.
building works fine on gen set which was brought in roughly 3 months ago as every time we go back on utility power brown outs occur again and in fact knock down traffic lights and a drug store across the road a block away. the traffic lights are on single phase portion of the transformers but the drug store has its own transformer from what I've noticed. during the brown out I noticed A phase was reading 60v B and C phases were around 170 volts. then A and C phases swapped and then C was 60 v. Utility company was called out to site and at the transformers they read proper voltages however, 15 ft down the line they were reading what I was the 60/170/170. Also was reading 15 amps on my ground. So I went ahead and re-fed 90 percent of the overhead lights and some other problematic outlets .
It definitely helped clear up my grounds. Also in doing so gave some of the groupings their own neutrals but still no ground wire. the brown outs dont happen all the time they are usually at higher load draws(low tide seems to happening as well) and then the gen set gets hooked up again so the facility can function (government building so I can't leave on utility for too long because they have to stay open.) We did ohm reading on ground rods my new ones were at 1 ohm utility is at 15 ohms, all within range of the 25 ohm rule.
All along the lights would drop for a split second when a/c unit kicks on. Yesterday I went up and took amp readings on the phases (3 phase 120/208 no neutral) I read ... A 45 amps/B38 Amps/C37 amps.
My question is this after all this work that's been done is it possible for the a/c unit to have been causing the issue all along. I find it hard to believe that an unbalanced load could cause brown out and push back on utility power. Oh and the reason I brought up the sea level thought was I kept reading at different times of the day (amps on ground, load amps) and it seemed to coincide with low tides.