Thanks for the pics..good news is IIRC that main lug assembly is replaceable, so it and the main breaker can be replaced without too much fuss.
As for one your last posts,
I disagree that inrush wasn't the cause of the mains tripping, as in addition to the refrigerated loads there will be this factor:
This lack of load diversity upon restoration of power can really add up the loads, and combined with the inrush from refrig loads, will easily trip the mains. I have seen this firsthand a few times.
Finally, if I were in your position I would go the extra mile and megger the panels and loads, as the reports of smoke and burning smells indicates that SOMETHING got too hot and will fail again at the worst possible time. I'm not convinced that the popping and smells have come from just this lug failure.
Oh, and did the customer say WHEN in this event they noticed the smoke and smells, and heard the pop? Was it BEFORE the power went out, during the restoration when the utility voltage was very likely unstable, or did they notice all that AFTER the power came back on? Was there a utility outage at all for other buildings served by the same transformers?
Still sounds like a potentially dangerous failure is imminent from here..
As for one your last posts,
HotConductor said:I am just not convinced this was an inrush problem because all the mains tripped.
I disagree that inrush wasn't the cause of the mains tripping, as in addition to the refrigerated loads there will be this factor:
broadgage said:Another reason can be a lot of thermostaticly controled water heaters, hot beverage machines and so on.
Under normal conditions the average load of such appliances can be suprisingly small, since they cycle on/off and only use power briefly once warmed up. After a shutdown though, all such appliances will draw full load current until the water/space/coffee is heated.
The load can easily exceed the service.
This lack of load diversity upon restoration of power can really add up the loads, and combined with the inrush from refrig loads, will easily trip the mains. I have seen this firsthand a few times.
Finally, if I were in your position I would go the extra mile and megger the panels and loads, as the reports of smoke and burning smells indicates that SOMETHING got too hot and will fail again at the worst possible time. I'm not convinced that the popping and smells have come from just this lug failure.
Oh, and did the customer say WHEN in this event they noticed the smoke and smells, and heard the pop? Was it BEFORE the power went out, during the restoration when the utility voltage was very likely unstable, or did they notice all that AFTER the power came back on? Was there a utility outage at all for other buildings served by the same transformers?
Still sounds like a potentially dangerous failure is imminent from here..
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