stickboy1375
Senior Member
- Location
- Litchfield, CT
How expensive would a 3 phase 25 HP rated disconnect on a corner grounded delta system be? Would a normal 3 phase 600v 25 HP rated disconnect be sufficient??jim dungar said:Particularly, beware of using circuit breakers or distribution panels on grounded-phase systems. UL has specific listings for any equipment (including fusible switches) used on these systems.
Yes, with one additional requirement: the groundeed conductor should be disconnected along with the others, as in Stick's drawing.chevyx92 said:Have I got this all correct????
Yes.chevyx92 said:Would a normal 3 phase 600v 25 HP rated disconnect be sufficient??
LarryFine said:Yes, with one additional requirement: the groundeed conductor should be disconnected along with the others, as in Stick's drawing.
Not according 240.22. If a breaker were used I would agree that you could disconnect the grounded conductor because all phases would open on a fault. But if you use a fused disconnect then that won't meet the requirements of 240.22. Or am I missing something here?LarryFine said:Yes, with one additional requirement: the groundeed conductor should be disconnected along with the others, as in Stick's drawing.
You do not necessarily have to ground "B" phase you can ground "A or C". I grounded "B" phase because I could come straight up to the double lug with the EGC from the shell lug on the transformer.chevyx92 said:Ok I think I have a real good picture of how you're suppose to corner ground a delta. 3 phase plus EGC in with no neutral, 3 phase plus EGC out no neutral. XO will not have any connections to it. Take and ground "B" phase of delta side to frame of Xfmr and building steel and EGC. "B" phase will be taped white and have no fused protection per code. And the disconnect has to be rated for a corner grounded system. Have I got this all correct???? Also are there any links of diagrams or pics or official documentation as to the way we are hooking this up?? Thanks.
You can't place a fuse in the grounded phase's fuse-holder, but the switch can open all conductors.chevyx92 said:Not according 240.22. If a breaker were used I would agree that you could disconnect the grounded conductor because all phases would open on a fault. But if you use a fused disconnect then that won't meet the requirements of 240.22. Or am I missing something here?
Thats what I was saying you can't fuse the grounded phase unless all phases open on a fault. A breaker will open all phases includung the grounded conductor if you do it this way. If you use a fused disconnect and a fault happens it doesnt necsesarily open all the phases.LarryFine said:You can't place a fuse in the grounded phase's fuse-holder, but the switch can open all conductors.
chevyx92 said:post #37
Let me ask this. By grounding the "B" phase that phase will have zero volts correct? If thats correct how would a 3 phase motor work on this corner grounded system? You would have phases A,C and the B is the grounded one with zero volts. Wouldn't the 3 phase motor be single phasing on this setup???
LarryFine said:post #39
Yes, B phase would have zero volts relative to earth, but the voltages among the three conductors remains the same.
chevyx92 said:Thats what I was saying you can't fuse the grounded phase unless all phases open on a fault. A breaker will open all phases includung the grounded conductor if you do it this way.
Yes you are correct. What I typed came out wrong.iwire said:That is a bit off, you can use a fused disconnect with a 'dummy fuse' in the grounded phase position.
dnem said:but that doesn't mean that there isn't current flow thru the ground and it also doesn't mean that multiple point earth connection is a good idea.
David
winnie said:I believe that David is talking about _multiple_ connections between the grounded conductor and earth, forming a parallel path for current flow.
iwire said:Jon, I understand that, why is that bad?
Lets consider for a moment how much current we are talking about, I bet it will be very low.
Take a steel framed building for instance, every column is another ground connection to earth.
It would be vitally imposable for an NEC compliant SDS to not have multiple connections to earth