Lbartowski
Member
- Location
- MN
I'll try and keep this short and simple.
4 isolation transformer with a 480v primary and 480v secondary was specified on a project I'm working on. It's fed from a 250 amp breaker and the secondary goes to a 150HP VFD which controls a large cooling tower. The riser diagram shows a 3-wire primary and a 3 wire secondary...but it was symbolically depicted on the riser (with fancy delta and Y symbols) as a delta in and wye out.
What my supplier submitted were delta/delta transformers. Neither myself, the customer, or the engineer noticed it, and the submittal was approved and the transformers were ordered. Not until they were on-site did the customer notice this.
Now I have 30K worth of transformers sitting on site that the factory won't accept as a return (says they're custom made to order) and the customer refuses to accept.
Can anyone explain to me the customers point of view? Is a corner grounded delta less safe than a wye? It only feeds the one load which is straight 3-wire 480v cooling tower?
4 isolation transformer with a 480v primary and 480v secondary was specified on a project I'm working on. It's fed from a 250 amp breaker and the secondary goes to a 150HP VFD which controls a large cooling tower. The riser diagram shows a 3-wire primary and a 3 wire secondary...but it was symbolically depicted on the riser (with fancy delta and Y symbols) as a delta in and wye out.
What my supplier submitted were delta/delta transformers. Neither myself, the customer, or the engineer noticed it, and the submittal was approved and the transformers were ordered. Not until they were on-site did the customer notice this.
Now I have 30K worth of transformers sitting on site that the factory won't accept as a return (says they're custom made to order) and the customer refuses to accept.
Can anyone explain to me the customers point of view? Is a corner grounded delta less safe than a wye? It only feeds the one load which is straight 3-wire 480v cooling tower?