Control Transformer Ground Reference

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Raymond Hope

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Okaloosa Technical College
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Instructor
I have always referenced my secondary voltage on 480/240 to 120 control transformers to ground on one side. I can't find anything that shows this as correct, or incorrect. Does anyone have any insight on this. My reasoning is that by referencing ground, I keep voltage off of the push buttons, and HOA switches.
 
It depends on a number of factors you haven’t mentioned. Read article 250.20 and see if that helps.

I really don’t understand your reasoning.
I found the clarification I was looking for in 250.20. Thank you. It seems that the secondary should indeed reference ground. Many of the factory pre-wired motor control boxes do not do this. By referencing ground, the voltage is no longer floating. This allows the Stop/Start/Jogg/HOA/etc buttons to be wired up with current flow through the conductors, but no voltage present.
 
I found the clarification I was looking for in 250.20. Thank you. It seems that the secondary should indeed reference ground. Many of the factory pre-wired motor control boxes do not do this. By referencing ground, the voltage is no longer floating. This allows the Stop/Start/Jogg/HOA/etc buttons to be wired up with current flow through the conductors, but no voltage present.
The code does not require that the control power transformer be a grounded system. 250.21(A)(3) permits them to be ungrounded. I have worked on a number of facilities where that was the design requirement as a single ground fault does not open an OCPD and the equipment remains operational.

I have never seen the control devices you mentioned wired into the grounded circuit conductor. They are always on the ungrounded conductor and have voltage on them.
 
The code does not require that the control power transformer be a grounded system. 250.21(A)(3) permits them to be ungrounded. I have worked on a number of facilities where that was the design requirement as a single ground fault does not open an OCPD and the equipment remains operational.

I have never seen the control devices you mentioned wired into the grounded circuit conductor. They are always on the ungrounded conductor and have voltage on them.
Thank you for responding. This added another level of clarification. Somehow I missed it when looking for the information, 250.20 gave me a much better idea, and 250.21(A)(3) spelled it out clearly.
 
If the one side is grounded it makes it a lot easier to troubleshoot. If they are left floating, you have to make sure you know where you are referencing you meter to when measuring voltages. If is grounded, I can check all the voltages pretty easily. Ground to Stop button, Ground to Start button, Ground to motor starter coil, etc.
 
If the one side is grounded it makes it a lot easier to troubleshoot. If they are left floating, you have to make sure you know where you are referencing you meter to when measuring voltages. If is grounded, I can check all the voltages pretty easily. Ground to Stop button, Ground to Start button, Ground to motor starter coil, etc.
Yes, whenever I had to troubleshoot one of the ungrounded motor control circuits, I would install a jumper to temporarily make a grounded system, because as you say, the ungrounded control circuits are more difficult to troubleshoot.
 
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