chris kennedy
Senior Member
- Location
- Miami Fla.
- Occupation
- 60 yr old tool twisting electrician
Cheezzyyy.
2: Depends on the avalible fault current. I would like to know that something has been tested so that during a fault, it doent just melt and leave the OCP closed. Putting that aside, It would probably work allright.
~Matt
The grounding electrode conductor for a SDS is not intended to carry fault current, or help in tripping an overcurrent device.
Chris
Cheezzyyy.
The grounding electrode conductor for a SDS is not intended to carry fault current, or help in tripping an overcurrent device.
Chris
What if there was a fault imposed directly to the building steel? Wouldn't the GEC carry fault current and keep the steel from becoming energized?
The point I was trying to make was that the purpose of the GEC at a SDS is not to carry fault current or trip an overcurrent device, but to limit the voltage imposed by lightning, line surges, or unintentional contact with higher-voltage lines and to stabilize the voltage to earth during normal operations.
Chris
I knew that, I was just trying to point out that it can indeed carry fault current under the right conditions.