Residential customer complaint of lights flickering a couple three times a day. They recorded the times they saw the lights flicker. This was checked and no cause found. A recorder was installed at the service entrance that did show the voltage drop from the AC but that was many times a day and didn't match their complaint. The recorder did show there was a voltage dip caused by a short 50 amp current rise during the times they saw the flicker. I checked the service by adding external loads to create phase unbalance and constant loading. No problem found.
Last week they called and said the flicker had stopped. In normal conversation they said they had just gotten their water well fixed.
Everyone, including me, is looking at the submersible water pump as the probable cause. After thinking about it for a while, I can't understand how a 240 volt pump motor can cause a current draw on one leg of the 240. If the motor or wiring was bad at the pump to create a fault, I would expect more current flow and tripping the OCPD. The well guys and the pump motor are gone now so I can't go backwards to find out.
If the pump motor is cap start and there is no fault, can the motor draw down only one leg of the 240 serving the well?
Last week they called and said the flicker had stopped. In normal conversation they said they had just gotten their water well fixed.
Everyone, including me, is looking at the submersible water pump as the probable cause. After thinking about it for a while, I can't understand how a 240 volt pump motor can cause a current draw on one leg of the 240. If the motor or wiring was bad at the pump to create a fault, I would expect more current flow and tripping the OCPD. The well guys and the pump motor are gone now so I can't go backwards to find out.
If the pump motor is cap start and there is no fault, can the motor draw down only one leg of the 240 serving the well?