Here's the deal. 16 unit apartment building completed about a year ago, each unit has 125A, 120/208V single-phase panel fed from a 120/208V 3-phase, 4 wire metercenter. Each unit has #1/0 CU feeder, less than 100' feeder length.
About once a month for the last year, the maintenance crews have to replace every single incandescent lamp that is installed inside the units because they are only getting an average of 25 to 30 days of life. Doesn't matter if its an A-19, PAR20, etc. Same problem month after month.
There are no appliance problems, the fluorescent lamps are fine. Almost all of the incandescent lighting fixtures are installed on dimmers. 1.2 ohms measured at the grounding electrode system. No issues with any house loads.
I have not been to the building to check things out my self. The POCO has done the usually battery of tests and have determined that everything is fine on their end. The power analysis indicates the voltage measured at a random sample location inside one of the units averaged between 124V and 125V over a two day period.....which falls within the POCO + or - 5% range of 114V to 126V that is deamed normal voltages. There were a couple spikes to 127.5V, but I could not tell for how long based on the scale of the graph.
Any thoughts? Are they just getting really cheap lamps rated for 120V and they can't handle the 125V supply?
About once a month for the last year, the maintenance crews have to replace every single incandescent lamp that is installed inside the units because they are only getting an average of 25 to 30 days of life. Doesn't matter if its an A-19, PAR20, etc. Same problem month after month.
There are no appliance problems, the fluorescent lamps are fine. Almost all of the incandescent lighting fixtures are installed on dimmers. 1.2 ohms measured at the grounding electrode system. No issues with any house loads.
I have not been to the building to check things out my self. The POCO has done the usually battery of tests and have determined that everything is fine on their end. The power analysis indicates the voltage measured at a random sample location inside one of the units averaged between 124V and 125V over a two day period.....which falls within the POCO + or - 5% range of 114V to 126V that is deamed normal voltages. There were a couple spikes to 127.5V, but I could not tell for how long based on the scale of the graph.
Any thoughts? Are they just getting really cheap lamps rated for 120V and they can't handle the 125V supply?