Since we are answering DIY questions, THHN has nothing to do with the resistance.
Gosh darn it Chris......I was typing again and you posted what I was posting......You are too quick to the draw:smile:
THHN has nothing to do with the resistance.
I am usually the one that is a slow typer.
Chris
I just tried out my new megga on a 225' run of 6 AWG THHN in EMT. I got 2.2 Gigga Ohms each phase, does this make sense at 1000 VDC?
CIECO is the door with the sign labeled Electrical Contractor Located in Maumelle, or on your front door in Vilonia?
ive been told one Meg-ohm per volt applied if you are referring to meg-ohm insulation testing
1 meg PER VOLT. For your 460-3-60 motor, that would be about 500 megohmsIn my book 1M is pretty darn low, not saying I would not energize it. But on a new run, must have plenty of yellow 77 in there. Plus in the long run it costs in energy use. I will wind a motor if can't get it above 4-500M.
I just tried out my new megga on a 225' run of 6 AWG THHN in EMT. I got 2.2 Gigga Ohms each phase, does this make sense at 1000 VDC?
As a general rule, the One-Megohm Rule (1MΩ per 1000 volts) is the widely-accepted absolute minimum insulation resistance value for normal electrical equipment.
Chris
Thank you for the answers, But I was looking for maybe UL spec or something. If I megg a run I would like to see infinity But that is not always the case, and on a new install there should be a spec or an accepted standard to go by. PS what or where the heck are Maumelle or Vilonia?