Dave Dungan
Member
Could someone explain to me what is meant by the term "bolted fault"?
SEO said:I like iwires analogy.
chris kennedy said:Maybe so, but I beat him by a few seconds. I used less words.:grin:
Dennis Alwon said:Yeah, but you weren't certain. You added "I believe" at the end.![]()
chris kennedy said:Ignore....
LarryFine said:Consider a 'bolted fault' to be a short circuit with a conductivity equal to the conductors in question.
I was in the USAF, but that's not where that description came from; I just made it up.chris kennedy said:Not bad. Military?
You can't just make stuff up Larry, you might get censored.LarryFine said:I just made it up.
chris kennedy said:You can't just make stuff up Larry, you might get censored.
Then again, I might not.chris kennedy said:You can't just make stuff up Larry, you might get censored.
Did you just make that up?480sparky said:Pay no attention to Chris... he's just making that up. :grin:
I would assume the term means mechanically connected as in bolted bussbar or terminated to a contactor motor leads like in the demonstrations of bolted fault that I have watched in training classes. As opposed to an arcing fault of 2 wires making contact much like a welding stinger and causing an ionization and conductivity of surrounding atmospheric air causing a conductive plasma cloud. Much more destructive due to the plasma cloud of molten metal and conductive ionized gasses.Dave Dungan said:Could someone explain to me what is meant by the term "bolted fault"?
quogueelectric said:I would assume the term means mechanically connected as in bolted bussbar or terminated to a contactor motor leads like in the demonstrations of bolted fault that I have watched in training classes. As opposed to an arcing fault of 2 wires making contact much like a welding stinger and causing an ionization and conductivity of surrounding atmospheric air causing a conductive plasma cloud. Much more destructive due to the plasma cloud of molten metal and conductive ionized gasses.