Saturn_Europa
Senior Member
- Location
- Fishing Industry
- Occupation
- Electrician Limited License NC, QMED Electrician
My facility uses the cheap automation direct Durapulse GS VFDs. Twice I’ve seen the drives show Ground Fault. Then the motor and the wire meg fine. In both instances I replaced the motor and the Ground Fault on the drive went away.
I’m assuming the motors had a phase to phase short and this is what caused the ground fault alarm on the VFD.
In a different instance. I’ve seen a terminal strip melt due to loose connections and the metal parts of the strip were shorting out 480v leg to leg. This would cause the ground fault meter on the switch board to switch from zero ohms to infinity constantly back and forth.
It’s my understanding that the ground fault meter on the switch board acts similarly to an Megger Insulation Tester. Where it sends a voltage and looks for a milli amp reading that it converts to M Ohms. So it makes sense that a leg to leg short would show up as a ground fault.
Do VFD ground fault indicators work in the same way ?
I’m assuming the motors had a phase to phase short and this is what caused the ground fault alarm on the VFD.
In a different instance. I’ve seen a terminal strip melt due to loose connections and the metal parts of the strip were shorting out 480v leg to leg. This would cause the ground fault meter on the switch board to switch from zero ohms to infinity constantly back and forth.
It’s my understanding that the ground fault meter on the switch board acts similarly to an Megger Insulation Tester. Where it sends a voltage and looks for a milli amp reading that it converts to M Ohms. So it makes sense that a leg to leg short would show up as a ground fault.
Do VFD ground fault indicators work in the same way ?
