A particular motor starter circuit has about (5) or so wires going back and forth to a control station and a starter. The voltage for these control wires are 120V.
The motor starter uses a solid state overload relay which uses some of the contorl wires from the field as inputs. On of these control wires is causing its solid state input to turn on when it shouldn't. When putting a meter on this wire it was found to have 28V. When measuring this voltage with a wiggy meter between this input and ground this 28V quickly disapears. When measuring with a fluke meter this 28V drops less rapidly.
The cable run is probably about 1000ft. I'm assuming that the voltage on this wire in question is being caused by an induced voltage or coupled capacitance with the long run.
If the 28V is a result of induction from the other cables, then I am trying to come up with an explanation as to what is going on. I'm assuming that the 28V drops to 0 when the wiggy is placed on it due to the fact that the wiggy has a low/high? impedance. If this is the case, then I am trying to figure out how this induced voltage should be represented. I am thinking it should be represented as a current source due to the fact that the voltage drops when a load it placed across it. Should this induced voltage be represented as a current source, or would it be a voltage source with a low VA and thus a large voltage drop when a load is placed across it?
The motor starter uses a solid state overload relay which uses some of the contorl wires from the field as inputs. On of these control wires is causing its solid state input to turn on when it shouldn't. When putting a meter on this wire it was found to have 28V. When measuring this voltage with a wiggy meter between this input and ground this 28V quickly disapears. When measuring with a fluke meter this 28V drops less rapidly.
The cable run is probably about 1000ft. I'm assuming that the voltage on this wire in question is being caused by an induced voltage or coupled capacitance with the long run.
If the 28V is a result of induction from the other cables, then I am trying to come up with an explanation as to what is going on. I'm assuming that the 28V drops to 0 when the wiggy is placed on it due to the fact that the wiggy has a low/high? impedance. If this is the case, then I am trying to figure out how this induced voltage should be represented. I am thinking it should be represented as a current source due to the fact that the voltage drops when a load it placed across it. Should this induced voltage be represented as a current source, or would it be a voltage source with a low VA and thus a large voltage drop when a load is placed across it?