EPC
Member
- Location
- Schenectady, NY
I was at a site that had new 120V ballast and lamps installed on a 208/120V utility connection. The owner is complaining that the electronic ballast are failing frequently (about 40 out of 416 in 6 months). At the incoming panel the neutral has a ground connection to the water pipe (Measured at 32 ohms). The phase current is about 150A, with about 10 amps in the neutral and near zero in the ground lead to the pipe. At the main panel I did not see a bare ground wire going to any of the feeders. In looking at a the lighting panel there was not any ground wire coming in or going to the lamps.
The building was installed in the early 1970's and may not have required the ground wire then. Since then the incoming utility transformer has been replaced and the area lights have new ballast and lamps (fixtures are the originals). When this type of rework is done, does the code require that the ground wire be added? The equipment ground is whatever the steel conduit provides. I do not know if the lack of a ground wire is part of the failure problem and I am grasping at straws to find a possible cause other than bad ballast.
The building was installed in the early 1970's and may not have required the ground wire then. Since then the incoming utility transformer has been replaced and the area lights have new ballast and lamps (fixtures are the originals). When this type of rework is done, does the code require that the ground wire be added? The equipment ground is whatever the steel conduit provides. I do not know if the lack of a ground wire is part of the failure problem and I am grasping at straws to find a possible cause other than bad ballast.