Reading 310 volts on a 120 240 volt residential system

snoogins1236

Member
Location
Colorado
Occupation
Electrician
Hi , today I wired up a 240 volt well pump, with a neutral, and phase to phase I read 310 volts. One line has 240 to ground/ neutral and the other line has 120 to ground/ neutral.

It originates from a fused knife switch disconnect where I have good readings of 120 and 240 on both line and load. Further on the load side there is a controller with a capacitor Bank with relays that talk to the holding tank for the well pump. My instinct is that the capacitor is sending extra voltage on one of the lines but I can't be sure because of the type of pull out pins/ plugs that this controller has. I ran out of time today so I will get this thread some pictures tomorrow when I return but I was scratching my head. Thanks for any and all. Help/insight
 
Hi , today I wired up a 240 volt well pump, with a neutral, and phase to phase I read 310 volts. One line has 240 to ground/ neutral and the other line has 120 to ground/ neutral.

It originates from a fused knife switch disconnect where I have good readings of 120 and 240 on both line and load. Further on the load side there is a controller with a capacitor Bank with relays that talk to the holding tank for the well pump. My instinct is that the capacitor is sending extra voltage on one of the lines but I can't be sure because of the type of pull out pins/ plugs that this controller has. I ran out of time today so I will get this thread some pictures tomorrow when I return but I was scratching my head. Thanks for any and all. Help/insight
Find and read the installation instructions before you own it.
 
Is all this new?
I'm wondering if you have a 3 wire pump? Or is it 2 wire?.
Ptonsparky. You've dealt with a lot of pumps.
me? Very few.
Could he have or need a 3 wire pump?
Which requires a controller?
2 wire or 3 wire?
 
I work with pumps. He sounds like a rookie messing with a 3 wire pump and 'controller" (really just a pump start). Probably reading back EMF. The controller does not talk to the tank. He is probably talking about wiring to the pump pressure switch.
 
I didn't know where he was getting the voltage. Sounds right.
Part of the architecture of a typical pump start is a potential relay that uses the back EMF of the pump to switch out the start circuit and capacitor. Generally speaking, anything larger than 1HP usually also has a run cap that stays in circuit to utilize the start winding for some extra go.
 
Yeah, I think he is understanding it all wrong. Sort of scary. I've seen quite the butchery in the field.
I havent wired a well pump in decades. Is it breaker to pressure switch to controller to pump?
Don't beat me up too bad....... 😄
 
I havent wired a well pump in decades. Is it breaker to pressure switch to controller to pump?
Don't beat me up too bad....... 😄
That's the path...(y). Always good to have a handle on the plumbing side as well because I've lost track of how many pumps were either murdered or needlessly replaced. One of the most fun as of recent was a family members very new pressure tank with a slow bladder leak. I had to go all the way to corporate OEM because the idiot plumber didn't want to buy my diagnosis.
 
Top