Ok. Is that ground reference from two ground rods?
What does that mean? what does it matter? The grounding connection has nothing to do with the current flow through loads.
there is 120 volts between each end of the transformer secondary winding and the center tap... and there is 240 v between the ends of the secondary winding. Loads connected to the center tap and the winding end will have 120v potential and the current will flow between the center tap through the load to the end of the winding ( and the other direction too ...alternating current)
There is no real reason you could not ground either end of the transformer winding and then that conductor would be at the same potential as the ground and the center tap would then be 120v to ground and the other end of the winding would be 240 v to ground ... grounding the center tap assures there is no voltage higher than 120 volts above the ground we are standing on that we could touch. Course if we really tried we could touch both phases .
So a 40 amp load on one leg and a 10 amp load on the opposing leg wouldn't create any problems.
no. what problems would it create?
With a difference in resistance there will be a difference in voltage. How would you keep the 120 volts steady?
Only if you lost your neutral connection.With a difference in resistance there will be a difference in voltage.
Only if you lost your neutral connection.
why don't you explain what that has to do with the subject of the thread, or your assertions during the course of the thread?
I'm goin to bed...
good night
The source of the unbalanced currents on the secondary side of a transformer is the secondary side of that transformer. There is no need for a grounded conductor on the supply side, but if you want one, use a grounded wye to supply the transformer, but supply it line to line and not line to neutral. The issue of stray voltage is the voltage drop on the primary grounded conductor. If you don't use that conductor as a current carrying conductor that issue goes away.Very well. I have already addressed the OP. breakers trip and the neutral is needed for safety on a distribution line by being multigrounded. It is also meant to be a low resistance path for imbalance currents to return to source. Your posts brought us off the main topic and to this point.
Sleep well...
No, there would be no issues, but there would be 30 amps on the secondary neutral. That has nothing to do with a primary neutral or lack there of.So a 40 amp load on one leg and a 10 amp load on the opposing leg wouldn't create any problems.
No, he is saying that you do not need to ground the neutral. You can have an ungrounded secondary and it will function fine, it just won't trip any breakers on the first fault. You can ground one side of the secondary and the voltage to neutral will stay the same.His whole point is that there doesn't need to be a neutral.
Deltas are still grounded to Earth but not in the sense that a Wye is.
To provide for lightning protection and to diminish the build up of static charges they use a simple transformer called a zig zag that has a center tap but no secondaries, it keeps the delta voltages in check with a reference to Earth, but this does not cause normal current to flow into the Earth like the MGN of a Wye system.
No, there would be no issues, but there would be 30 amps on the secondary neutral. That has nothing to do with a primary neutral or lack there of.
How frequently are they installed along the line, or are they just at the ends of the line?
I have seen miles of transmission lines that I assume are from delta secondaries and you never see any kind of transformer except at the substations. Newer lines have the shield conductor at top of poles but some older lines just have the three phase conductors and that is it. No electrode conductor attached to any of them, so none of them is likely to be grounded.
The source of the unbalanced currents on the secondary side of a transformer is the secondary side of that transformer. There is no need for a grounded conductor on the supply side, but if you want one, use a grounded wye to supply the transformer, but supply it line to line and not line to neutral. The issue of stray voltage is the voltage drop on the primary grounded conductor. If you don't use that conductor as a current carrying conductor that issue goes away.
What does that have to do with the unbalanced current on the secondary side of a transformer that feeds a building?Utility lines are nothing more than secondary lines of a larger system. Most substation transformers are delta-wye transformers, 10-20 mVa.