We have a cable reel on which a 16/c #10 cable is wrapped around a cable reel which rotates to unspool cables as a piece of equipment moves.
We noticed that we were getting low megger readings on a particualr motor when megged from the starter bucket, so we started isolating parts of the cable run. Finially we isolated it down to the cable reel.
When we disconnected (5) of the cables in the cable reel at both ends and read them to ground at 1000V with a megger, we saw the the readings bounced around between 12meg and 18meg. We did this on a few more cables disconnected at both ends and saw the same thing. The weird thing however was that when checking L-L readings between any two of these cables our readings were over 4000meg. I would suspect that if each cable had a low L-G reading that two of then would have a low L-L reading. This does not seem to make sense. Does anyone agree?
This cable is several years old and has been in use for a while and was just recently re-located to a different piece of equipment. I have told management that with these low megger readings between 12-18meg the motor and equipment will still run o.k. but it is a sign that the insulation is breaking down and we should be prepared to get a new cable sometime in the near future. Do you guys agree with this assesment?
Is there any explanaion as to why L-G readings would be low, however L-L readings between cables would be high?
Some of the cables are operated at 480V and some at 120V.
We noticed that we were getting low megger readings on a particualr motor when megged from the starter bucket, so we started isolating parts of the cable run. Finially we isolated it down to the cable reel.
When we disconnected (5) of the cables in the cable reel at both ends and read them to ground at 1000V with a megger, we saw the the readings bounced around between 12meg and 18meg. We did this on a few more cables disconnected at both ends and saw the same thing. The weird thing however was that when checking L-L readings between any two of these cables our readings were over 4000meg. I would suspect that if each cable had a low L-G reading that two of then would have a low L-L reading. This does not seem to make sense. Does anyone agree?
This cable is several years old and has been in use for a while and was just recently re-located to a different piece of equipment. I have told management that with these low megger readings between 12-18meg the motor and equipment will still run o.k. but it is a sign that the insulation is breaking down and we should be prepared to get a new cable sometime in the near future. Do you guys agree with this assesment?
Is there any explanaion as to why L-G readings would be low, however L-L readings between cables would be high?
Some of the cables are operated at 480V and some at 120V.