wptski
Senior Member
- Location
- Warren, MI
I've search the net and this forum for information on what would be normal, if there is such a thing for the "net current leakage"/"ground or neutral current leakage on a residential 120V/neutral/120V service. Although I've found some interesting threads, none are for residential, so far!
It appears that the applied loads aren't setup very well, meaning there are two fridges and the furnace blower motor on one side. At the POC into the home, one side is drawing .5A but the other side as much as 14A at times. The net current leakage for the two 120V wires plus neutral is 5.4A and 9A on the neutral alone. I'm wondering if this all becuase on the imbalance?
The garage where there's a good sized air compressor is on the same side as the bigger loads. If the compressor is turned ON, the neautral current increases to 15A.
Another odd thing is that at the POC, the .5A side is showing 80% THD with the other side just a few percent. Most if not all of these wires are impossible to get a current clamp around in the fuse panel in this 50 year old home!
EDIT: Managed to get my AEMC F25 around the service coming from the meter, figured out which side is which and figured out which branch circuit the distortion was coming from. The closer you get to the source the greater it is, way over a 100% at the branch! I put a scope on it and it's your typical SMPS current distortion. It's on a receptical with a TV, DVD/VCR Player and a very old Radio Shack antenna amplifier which I think is the culprit!
It appears that the applied loads aren't setup very well, meaning there are two fridges and the furnace blower motor on one side. At the POC into the home, one side is drawing .5A but the other side as much as 14A at times. The net current leakage for the two 120V wires plus neutral is 5.4A and 9A on the neutral alone. I'm wondering if this all becuase on the imbalance?
The garage where there's a good sized air compressor is on the same side as the bigger loads. If the compressor is turned ON, the neautral current increases to 15A.
Another odd thing is that at the POC, the .5A side is showing 80% THD with the other side just a few percent. Most if not all of these wires are impossible to get a current clamp around in the fuse panel in this 50 year old home!
EDIT: Managed to get my AEMC F25 around the service coming from the meter, figured out which side is which and figured out which branch circuit the distortion was coming from. The closer you get to the source the greater it is, way over a 100% at the branch! I put a scope on it and it's your typical SMPS current distortion. It's on a receptical with a TV, DVD/VCR Player and a very old Radio Shack antenna amplifier which I think is the culprit!
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