crossman
Senior Member
- Location
- Southeast Texas
weressl said:The lamps connected in such fashion make this a resistance grounded system.
That is what I think too.
weressl said:The lamps connected in such fashion make this a resistance grounded system.
weressl said:The lamps connected in such fashion make this a resistance grounded system.
Use the corner ground if you still work with a stone ax to gather your food....right after you filled out your Geico form.![]()
jim dungar said:Up until the 2005 edition the NEC did not require ground detection/indication. So many if not most ungrounded systems were installed without this feature for almost 100 years.
Adding wye connected ground detection schemes that contain resistance does not create "resistance grounded" delta power systems as the term is normally used. At best you could say that these resistors create an artificial neutral point.
weressl said:Use the corner ground if you still work with a stone ax to gather your food....right after you filled out your Geico form.![]()
If the wye point is not grounded the device will not function as a ground detector.weressl said:True, but Bob asked the lamps' why point to be connected to ground which MADE it a resistance grounded system.
iwire said:What is your constructive suggestion for the OP?
zog said:YOU USE PT's!!!
iwire said:That is one way to do it.
The OP is trying to meet code requirements while on a budget.
It is called an artificial nuetral because it is not a real neutral.jim dungar said:If the wye point is not grounded the device will not function as a ground detector.
To split hairs even further your so called artificial neutral would not be a neutral since there is a load inserted between the voltage source and the grounding point
zog said:Thats the only way to do it RIGHT.
weressl said:IMO the a delta system ground fault indicating light WYE does not need to be connected to ground in order to function.
weressl said:IMO the a delta system ground fault indicating light WYE does not need to be connected to ground in order to function.
iwire said:Why, cause it's pretty?
There are 1,000s of the type A lamp set ups operating right now.
winnie said:Clearly the lights are resistors and provide a connection to ground via the resistance, so the system _is_ 'resistance grounded'.
zog said:Thats the only way to do it RIGHT. What is his budget, 4 bucks? Geez, we scrap PT's for the copper, they are cheap.
jim dungar said:Could you provide any reference that supports your claim that detectors connected in this manner change an ungrounded delta distribution system into a resistance grounded system?