Damien
Member
- Location
- Grass valley
- Occupation
- Electrician
Hey all this is a first post for me. I just walked onto a job with a 480v 4 wire service. The tenant space I’ve been asked to work in has a three phase 480-240 delta delta 30kva transformer in it with no neutral coming in on the primary side of the transformer. Currently there is a 100 amp fused disconnect on the primary side. On the secondary side of the transformer are two panels, a single phase three wire panel with a 100main breaker AND a three phase 225 amp panel with no neutral in it. Both of these panels and the transformer were recently installed by a different electrician prior to me and currently have no loads on them. The tenants do not need three phase for any of their equipment which is all 240v or 120v.
My questions regards the ocpd in relation to the transformer. Since there is both primary and secondary ocpds it’s my understanding based on table 450.3(b) that the primary ocpd can be 250% of Ip or
36.1*2.5=90.25a.
can this be rounded up to 100a fuses?
on the secondary side I would be allowed 125% of 72.2 amps also equaling 90.25a.
Can this be rounded up to a 100 amp breaker?
This leads me to believe that the second 225amp panel exceeds the overcurrent protection for the secondary side of the transformer correct?
also, since no neutral is brought from the main service there is a neutral produced from the center tapped leg of the delta on the secondary side. This leaves me with some weird voltages to ground. 70 volts neutral to ground, 128v L1 to ground and 138v L2 to ground and 148v L3 to ground. What is the best remedy for this?
thanks everyone for the help!
My questions regards the ocpd in relation to the transformer. Since there is both primary and secondary ocpds it’s my understanding based on table 450.3(b) that the primary ocpd can be 250% of Ip or
36.1*2.5=90.25a.
can this be rounded up to 100a fuses?
on the secondary side I would be allowed 125% of 72.2 amps also equaling 90.25a.
Can this be rounded up to a 100 amp breaker?
This leads me to believe that the second 225amp panel exceeds the overcurrent protection for the secondary side of the transformer correct?
also, since no neutral is brought from the main service there is a neutral produced from the center tapped leg of the delta on the secondary side. This leaves me with some weird voltages to ground. 70 volts neutral to ground, 128v L1 to ground and 138v L2 to ground and 148v L3 to ground. What is the best remedy for this?
thanks everyone for the help!