ryan_618
Senior Member
- Location
- Salt Lake City, Utah
Why do we (earth) ground transformers?
CharlieOriginally posted by charlie b:
Also because we bond them. If the center point of a WYE secondary is connected (bonded) to the case, and if that same point is not ?earthed,? then there would be a potential difference between the case you touch with your hands and the dirt you touch with your shoes. This would create a ?human GEC.?
I was thinking more along (with what I remember) that the voltage to ground would be unequal. Say 100 on one leg and then 150 and 90 on the others. Or something like that.Originally posted by charlie:
It does Larry. A static charge can build up on an ungrounded system so the AC actually rides on the static charge. Everything actually works well but the static could really hurt someone.
I am in the same boat as Ryan, I am not seeing the link to the transformers I deal with.Originally posted by ryan_618:
Charlie, I understand what you are saying regarding high voltage, but I am thinking in terms of a typical 480 Delta 208Y/120 transformer.
Thanks for your help, even though I'm still not perfectly clear
I never thought about it until I heard Mike Holt ask the same queestion I did. Why do we do this?Originally posted by friebel:
After reading all of the threads on "Earth" Grounding Transformers, I am going to make a suggestion. If you ever get the opportunity to attend one of Mike Holt's Grounding & Bonding Seminars, do it. It will help to answer all of your questions that you may have.
If the neutral is not ?earthed,? then it can ?float? at any voltage with respect to planet Earth. Think of it as a charged capacitor. In order for the capacitor to have become charged, it had to have currents flowing, however briefly, through a not-yet-complete path, from the source (i.e., the transformer) to both sides of the capacitor (i.e., the transformer case and planet Earth). When a person touches the case, the capacitor is discharged through the person.Originally posted by sandsnow: Charlie. Where would the current be trying to flow to? . . . So how does it play out if we don't ground the neutral and someone touches the XFMR case?
It would depend on where the lightning strikes. I?ll address Pierre?s question next, so let?s talk now about an outdoor pad-mounted 480V ? 120Y/208V transformer. Recall that we are talking about two separate connections: (1) The connection (bond) between the center point of the WYE and the transformer case, and (2) The connection (ground) between that same point and planet Earth.Originally posted by ryan_618: How would lightning differentiate between the transformers earth ground and the original systems earth ground?
An indoor transformer is not going to be struck by lightning, so that consideration does not come into play. But the possibility of having the case of the transformer ?float? at a voltage different from, say, the floor next to it, is still a consideration. ?Earthing? the center point of the WYE accomplishes the same thing that I have described earlier. From the perspective of a possible ?Human GEC,? running a long copper GEC is not as desirable as having the transformer on an outdoor pad. But that is not possible in a high-rise, and this is the next best thing.Originally posted by pierre: The question at this point that begs answering is: what if there is no means of grounding in the vicinity of the transformer (no steel, cold water, etc...), and a grounding electrode conductor has to be installed 3 floors downstairs to ground rods outside? What does this really accomplish?