NICK D said:
A Neutral Conductor Is A Conductor That Has An Equal Potential Difference Between It And The Other Output Conductors Of A 3 Wire Or 4 Wire System. So A Delta 4 Wire 120/240v Would Not Have A Neutral Conductor.
The code panel apparently doesn't agree with your conclusion.
NEC Committee Report on Proposals 2007 page 26
5-36 Log #1554 NEC-P05
Panel Meeting Action: Accept in Principle
Add the following (two) definitions to Article 100 as follows:
Neutral Conductor. The conductor connected to the neutral point of a system that is intended to carry current under normal conditions.
Neutral point. The common point on a wye-connection in a polyphase system or midpoint on a single-phase, 3-wire system, or midpoint of a single-phase portion of a 3-phase delta system, or a midpoint of a 3-wire, direct current system.
FPN: At the neutral point of the system, the vectorial sum of the nominal voltages from all other phases within the system that utilize the neutral, with respect to the neutral point, is zero potential.
So in the 2008 code there will be wording that says:
Neutral Conductor. The conductor
connected to the neutral point of a system that is intended to carry current under normal conditions.
Neutral point. The common point on a wye-connection in a polyphase system or midpoint on a single-phase, 3-wire system, or
midpoint of a single-phase portion of a 3-phase delta system, or a midpoint of a 3-wire, direct current system.
FPN: At the
neutral point of the system, the vectorial sum of the nominal voltages from all other phases within the system
that utilize the neutral, with respect to the neutral point,
is zero potential.
The high leg doesn't utilize the neutral so you don't take into consideration the fact that the voltage from highleg to neutral is different than the other legs.
Also, altho the neutral point definition doesn't mention a corner grounded delta, the fact that the FPN uses the word "other" makes me wonder about how they're looking at a corner grounded delta.
FPN: At the
neutral point of the system, the vectorial sum of the nominal voltages from all
other phases within the system that utilize the neutral, with respect to the neutral point, is zero potential.
The conductor attached to the corner grounded termination of the delta is a ground
ed conductor. It also is a
phase conductor. But are they implying that it is also a
neutral conductor ? What other reason would they have added the word "other" ?
David