- Location
- New Jersey
- Occupation
- Journeyman Electrician
Someone ran this by me today. They're reverse wiring a standard Delta/Wye transformer to get 480 volts with a 208 volt supply. Here are the details as I've been told:
1) Standard everyday 225 KVA transformer w/ 480 Delta primary, 208Y/120 volt secondary
2) Temporarily reverse wired to provide 480 volts to elevator motors
3) System to operate as grounded* but not a corner grounded Delta
So disregarding the NEC for a moment, :roll:
the issue is that they want to have this grounded so if someone tests from phase to ground they will get some voltage reading indicating that the feeder is energized. They do not want to operate as ungrounded in case someone only tests to ground. They do not want to use a corner ground (I'm assuming due to fuses in the motor circuits) so they've decided to *ground one of the voltage taps on the Delta primary. Yes that's right they're grounding #5 tap on one of the H windings. This will show some voltage when testing pahse to ground based on where that tap is physically on the coil.
Questions:
Will this actually work?
What will it do to the transformer when loaded?
Is the guy who designed this crazy?
IMO in theory it will work, not much different than a center tap on one winding (only this tap isn't in the center of the winding) but was wondering, aside from the code issues, what may or may not happen.
1) Standard everyday 225 KVA transformer w/ 480 Delta primary, 208Y/120 volt secondary
2) Temporarily reverse wired to provide 480 volts to elevator motors
3) System to operate as grounded* but not a corner grounded Delta
So disregarding the NEC for a moment, :roll:
the issue is that they want to have this grounded so if someone tests from phase to ground they will get some voltage reading indicating that the feeder is energized. They do not want to operate as ungrounded in case someone only tests to ground. They do not want to use a corner ground (I'm assuming due to fuses in the motor circuits) so they've decided to *ground one of the voltage taps on the Delta primary. Yes that's right they're grounding #5 tap on one of the H windings. This will show some voltage when testing pahse to ground based on where that tap is physically on the coil.
Questions:
Will this actually work?
What will it do to the transformer when loaded?
Is the guy who designed this crazy?
IMO in theory it will work, not much different than a center tap on one winding (only this tap isn't in the center of the winding) but was wondering, aside from the code issues, what may or may not happen.
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