jnaas2
Member
- Location
- Evansville, In
Any body ever had a 100 amp main fail between phases
Any body ever had a 100 amp main fail between phases
Don't remember if it was specifically a 100 amp main, but I've had a couple go bad.
And I don't know why I can never remember, but I know what it is when I see it, but you either get 220 across but 110 on only one leg or if you get 110 and 110 but not 220.
If you have one pole fail to close you get 120,120 but no 240.
I guess I thought when he said fail between phases, I was thinking you get a lot of fault current, and hopefully on load side of contacts and magnetic trip mechanism.
If you have one pole fail to close you get 120,120 but no 240.
I guess I thought when he said fail between phases, I was thinking you get a lot of fault current, and hopefully on load side of contacts and magnetic trip mechanism.
That makes sense and you may have cleared that up for me before.
Well now also, I may have assumed that I knew what he was talking about. He said "fail between phases".
I checked all that, the only reason I think it was a meter malfunction or main is that both sides of the 100 amp breaker had arc damage but the neutral wire was in perfect shape. If a ungrounded wire was hooked to the neutral lug in panel it would, have showed damage like the 2 line wires did. And the one meter stab that burned had more arc damage on the 100 amp breaker then the other one
One other thought, I know when you have a loose neutral the voltages will do strange things but I havent dealt with these smart meters much, could that have caused a issue even though there was no load applied to either phase at panel but maybe by the meter, just a thought
If the connections are all secure you will not see any damage, unless maybe the fault current was really high, I'm talking the kind of incident where the guy plugging in the meter is going to the hospital if he had little or no protective gear.
There may have been a layer of conductive dust or a foreign object across the terminals of the breaker that have vaporized during the incident, or if there was a fault within the breaker you may have soot deposits on conductors from any venting that escaped around the line side lugs area. Do you have melted metal at the line side terminations or just a layer of film deposited there?
I guess only one meter plug could be burned if contact was not made simultaneously. Say Line 1 was made first with no fault, than line 2 closes into a fault - line 2 would be the one that has burn marks
Never heard of the term Idle meter inspection,