This is not a transformer problem and the more time wasted on this is keeping someone from finding the real issue.
The OP
@mike1061 has a standard open delta 240V service, where
b-
c is the open set, he ordered two delta:wye transformers as he needed a 240 wye system for reasons you
@Jraef eloquently explain.
Since one transformer was wye-wye mislabeled delta/wye he connected this wye-wye transformer with a floating primary neutral to the open delta system. The way I understand it is the voltage across each primary winding is determined by the distance from each primary phase (
a,
b,
c) to the floating primary neutral point.
Mathematically I think the equation is
V
n0 = (V
a+V
b+V
c)/3
As we know Open Delta, the voltage relationship
b-n is from the midpoint of the other two phases
a &
c to
b. When you apply a load across
b-n , the voltage V
b-n drops significantly more than V
a-
n or V
c-
n.
Much like you were running a large 208V load
b-n or a large 1-phase 240V load b-c
The wye-wye floating neutral
n0 "slides" toward the stronger phases (
a and
c).
I suspect the wye-wye secondary voltage (where phases are A,
B,
C) on Phase
B-
N can collapse while Phases
A-N and
C-N spike. Since the secondary was feeding a VFD it likely tripped on under-voltage or phase imbalance immediately.