ProjectDelta
Member
- Location
- Michigan
- Occupation
- Electrician
I’ve been working in an auto plant for quite some time and the design of the systems I work with (robot cells, paint booths, etc.) call for individual grounds from the equipment to a ground block that is bonded to building steel (which is called out as a Grounding Electrode on the prints). For example a 480V 100A PDP, which contains its own transformers to step down voltage to 120v but also utilizes 480v, has an equipment ground with the feed. On top of that, a #6 ground wire is run to a ground block which is bonded to building steel. Most of the equipment like PLCs, Junction Gate Boxes, Ethernet switches, also have their own #8 grounds run separately to said ground block. Like I said, these grounds are in addition to the equipment grounds that run with the conductors that power the equipment. I’ve asked around as to why the equipment is bonded/grounded in this way. I receive varying answers. Some say it Carrie’s fault current (which makes no sense if it’s bonded to a GE). Some say it’s to reduce electrical noise in the signal circuits. Has anyone worked on a design similar to this and definitely know it’s intent?