dns718
Member
- Location
- Venice, FL, USA
[FONT=Open Sans, sans-serif]Hi, I’ve seen quite a few posts about tripping breakers that are associated directly with the pool pump. In my case, I have a new house + new pool with, varying by day, 1 or 2 so-called “3-way” (Schneider Electric Square-D brand overload/arc/ground fault detect) breakers that are tripping - on the main house panel. After some detective work and data collection, we see a very high correlation between the time of the pool pump turns on and begins priming and when the other house breakers trip. The pool pump is hooked into its own junction box (breaker stable), that runs to a 60A breaker (also stable) on the house main panel. We have a Hayward SP3400VSP EcoStar Variable Speed Pump. It was set by the pool company Aquatech to prime for 2 minutes at the maximum speed of 3450 rpm, which appears to cause the trips in other part of the house panel. We altered the turn-on time of the pool pump, and indeed the time of the trips are following this time exactly, so we have high confidence at this point in the cause-and-effect of the correlation seen. After some time invested with the nice support engineering staff at Schneider Electric in North Carolina, have learned further that these trips are uniformly due to ground fault interrupts (vs. overload or arc conditions – these breakers have a way to discover type of last trip). We have as of today started an experiment to reduce the maximum prime/turn-on speed from 3450 rpm to 3000 rpm in an effort to reduce the inrush current demand/surge to see if this reduction helps in the ground fault, will update later on if this helps. I should add that the run from the main house panel to the pool pump junction box is about 60′ but may have up to 80′ of wire, and runs through an under-slab conduit put in prior to house foundation (wire pulled later of course and was sized to 60A / 220v – not sure as to exact gauge; pool pump is about 11A supposedly; trench is about 18"). The pool pump is grounded along with the control electronics on the side of the house. In my pre-retired life in engineering of micro-circuits, ground shifts in PCBs were a constant challenge requiring extensive capacitive filtering, so I am wondering if anyone has heard of whether this kind of problem could require some added high-voltage capacitor / filter at the pool pump itself; Schneider Electric thought this might interfere with the correct performance of the circuit breakers. After I’ve collected some more data I will go back to my builder or another independent electrician but wondering if anyone else has seen this? My pool company/electrician has not seen it before and I’m not finding this case on the web as yet… Appreciate any thoughts or insights! Seeing some submissions on surge protector possibly contributing to nuisance ground faults, I'll add that there is a whole-house surge suppressor installed by the local electrician (brand "SyCom") on the main panel, with dual-breaker 35A installed (in parallel most likely to other panel circuits given location). Thanks[/FONT]