That would have been helpful information at the outset.B phase on the Delta system is grounded.
B phase on the Delta system is grounded.
It still shouldn't matter unless somebody tried to connect the neutral from the generator to the delta system.
They connected the neutral from the generator to ground.
It still shouldn't matter unless somebody tried to connect the neutral from the generator to the delta system.
Definitely the problem. The generator output (in its entirety) should be grounded at only one point, as with any supply, and in this case, determined by the grounded phase.They connected the neutral from the generator to ground.
They connected the neutral from the generator to ground.
And if done properly should only be bonded at the service disconnecting means, amd run separate EGC's beyond that. This is exactly what you would do with wye supply anyway.B phase on the Delta system is grounded.
They connected the neutral from the generator to ground.
to a certain extent I don't see why one couldn't leave it float and ground a phase. If you bring the neutral out in any way then it must be the grounded conductor.Are you allowed to let the neutral float in the generator? If so, wouldn't this work just fine?
I guess you would have to have a ground detector of some sort?
.to a certain extent I don't see why one couldn't leave it float and ground a phase.
Where you ground depends if your transfer arrangement is set up as separately derived system or not. For non separately derived, you already have bonding at the service equipment, your "grounded conductor" should not have any fuses in it and should not have any switches or circuit breakers unless they also simultaneously open all conductors of the circuit - and you should have a separate EGC run from transfer equipment to generator frame, but no bonding to the "B" phase, that would introduce parallel paths for the grounded circuit conductor..
Since the service the generator is feeding has a grounded "B" phase, would you need to ground a phase at the transformer?
If you did, it would have to be "B" phase of course.
190611-0751 EDT
Whether something is a wye or delta has to do with wiring or configuration of the device.
Wye or delta alone says nothing about grounding. If you want to define how it is grounded, then you must add some qualifier to indicate means of grounding, if there is any grounding.
In many large industrial plants floating deltas are used. Where the lines (wiring) float relative to ground (earth) is determined by distributed capacitance and leakage of the distribution wiring and loads.
The words alone of wye or delta do not require or imply any grounding. Many, possibly most, electricians make some assumption of a particular way of grounding for a wye or delta. This can be a major mistake as indicated by this thread.
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Correct. Where some get confused is NEC requires the neutral to be the point that is grounded. If you are not utilizing the neutral for any loads you don't necessarily have a neutral and can leave it as an internal point in the source and only bring out the three other leads for utilization, in that case to have a grounded system you must ground one of those three leads.
We do this all the time with delta systems made up of a bank of single phase transformers. Each one has a mid point, but we build a corner ground system by not tying into any of those mid point taps. Tie into one of them with a conductor for utilization purposes and it must become the grounded conductor per NEC and you end up with a high leg system.