Well, I guess on the other hand, you have put me on notice that you have absolutely no sense of humor, and are so insecure in your own knowledge that you cannot take even the lightest of ribbing either.
Assuming .040A of leakage current and 10,000ohms of impedance, your meter could read 400V.
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In my previous post I should have clarified my statement to be "floating L-N" versus ungrounded measurements. Yes, a direct connection to the neutral point of the transformer will 'lock' that conductor/ground at 120V relative to a line. The point I was trying to make, was to perform all of the L-G, L-N, L-L, and N-G measurements at the source and at the 'problem area'.
Yes.So are you saying that this coupling voltage may depend on the impedence of the meter although we are reading in parallel across the L-G? So for a lower impedence meter we would see less volage?
I didn't try to follow your resolution completely. If the TX neutral to the load neutral was severed then you had a floating neutral problem. If the TX neutral to ground connection was severed you had an ungrounded problem. I thought you had both.In this case we had a broken or floating neutral since the neutal connection from the loads back to the transformer was severed. However in this case the neutral voltage didn't appear to be determined by the load impedences (in series) but rather was affected by the grounding.
A megger requires the neutral to ground bond to be opened. An open circuit is infinite resistance not 0meg. My suggestion for all of the voltage measurements was to help in troubleshooting an energized system. Over the years I have seen many people simply measure voltage L-G and then assume they have a bonded/grounded neutral.When troubleshooing the secondary of a transormer like this we usually check with either a megger or meter to see if any lines are going to ground. When checking either L1, or L2 to ground should we read an open circuit with either a meter or megger? I would think that you should read an open circuit of 0meg however if you look at the schematic, with the center point grounded you have a path through the transformer coil between the L1, or L2 conductor to this ground point. This would lead me to believe that this would not show an open circuit?
A megger requires the neutral to ground bond to be opened. An open circuit is infinite resistance not 0meg. My suggestion for all of the voltage measurements was to help in troubleshooting an energized system. Over the years I have seen many people simply measure voltage L-G and then assume they have a bonded/grounded neutral.
