090430-2021 EST
090502-1625 EST I have been starting this for several days.
090503-2216 EST
mivey:
Assuming that ideal measures the voltage from neutral to EGC while current is injected into neutral, then this is a measurement of the neutral impedance from the outlet to the main panel, and the ECG is simply used as a test lead to get a voltage reference at the main panel neutral.
A measurement of the outlet hot terminal to neutral for no current load and a known load allows determination of the voltage drop at the outlet for the load. From this one can calculate the total impedance of the transformer, service wires, meter, main panel breakers, and branch circuit wiring and outlet. This includes all connection resistances as well.
Next if the neutral impedance is subtracted from the impedance from the load voltage drop, then a value can be calculated for the hot impedance. This includes more than just the branch circuit hot impedance. From your data this looks like the Ideal approach.
Your post #5:
Microwave --- assume #12 copper wire, then distance from this outlet to main panel is about 0.07*1000/1.588 = 44 ft. Is this close?
The two kitchen counter outlets appear to be slightly longer branch circuit runs, or possibly smaller wire.
I do not believe there is any way for Ideal to measure the neutral impedance from the main panel to the transformer center tap.
Your measurement at the main panel of Zhot appears to be the the sum of all impedances of the transformer, the hot and neutral leads, and any other stuff in this series path. Ideal's measurement of about 0.1 ohms approximates the sum of the two values I calculated from your earlier data, 0.038+0.068 = 0.106 ohms.
Your last post with 0.67 V N-G and 10.79 A is 0.062 ohms. This is a good correlation with your Ideal measurement of 0.07 ohms.
I find that my 87 meter takes a little time to stabilize after a step change. Not so with the 27.
When you made measurements at the main panel with the Ideal and got a slightly different reading for neutral and EGC, it is was one digit, you may consider this to be instrumentation error. Both paths must be very near zero ohms and probe contact resistance or path differences may be the reason.
Bill:
Now to your data.
Until you get to the garage the vast majority of EGC impedances are lower, and substantially lower for many, than the associated neutral. Seems unlikely.
Also there were a number of hot impedances lower than the associated neutral.
50 ft of #12 copper is about 1.588/20 = 0.08 ohms. And #14 for 50 ft would be 2.525*0.00.13 ohms.
I measured two QO20 breakers including contact resistance and the values were 0.011 and 0.008 ohms at 12 A.
I have more comments but this has been dragging too long.
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