Electromatic
Senior Member
- Location
- Virginia
- Occupation
- Master Electrician
I went to an industrial site the other day where they have recently had several large, 3Ø, 480V, 13.5kW, plug-in space heaters blow out an element. The same element failed in the different heaters. The service is a corner-grounded delta, and the grounded phase was one leg of the failed elements. The receptacle they plug this into is tapped directly off the main 400A breaker of a motor control center. There is a switch for the receptacle but no separate overcurrent protection. There is a small-ish AB SMC Flex drive fed off the MCC, and there's also a ≈1yr old larger Siemens Sinamics frequency converter fed off it.
The site is having the power company monitor their service for abnormalities. We couldn't find anything out of the ordinary. We are suggesting a separate OCPD for the heater receptacle. Does anyone have any thoughts about what might be causing this or what to look for? Could something be going awry with the grounded leg? Could the drive or newish frequency converter be dumping energy back through the MCC and into the heater receptacle? I didn't see any line reactors, resistors, etc.
Thanks in advance for any ideas.
The site is having the power company monitor their service for abnormalities. We couldn't find anything out of the ordinary. We are suggesting a separate OCPD for the heater receptacle. Does anyone have any thoughts about what might be causing this or what to look for? Could something be going awry with the grounded leg? Could the drive or newish frequency converter be dumping energy back through the MCC and into the heater receptacle? I didn't see any line reactors, resistors, etc.
Thanks in advance for any ideas.

