mivey
Senior Member
In that case you have included the neutral. You can still have ground leakage current, but I would not expect at a value that would be a problem. For multi-grounded neutrals, the ground current can be significant.I am still at a loss to understand this, I see it like Cold F sees it.
A common example in my world is the use of a two pole GFCI circuit breaker and no matter how unbalanced the loading is the breaker will not trip as all circuit conductors are being measured.
A residual ground does not use the neutral. It is like clamping an ammeter around the phases and tripping when the net current gets above a set threshold.
What a strange reaction. Maybe you can catch a ride with iwire. Note to self: Must remember to arrive in separate vehicles.Good thing I came in late that day -If I had heard that, I'd have dropped to the floor and crawled back out - probably whimpering in defeat.
The same principles apply, except we wouldn't normally have a multi-grounded neutral inside the plant. You know good and well basic transmission line theory is not restricted to HV lines.I didn't think the OP or zog was talking about transmission lines. Even your post was about mis-connected SDS.
cf