poweringtech
Member
Is ungrounded system prohibited in the NEC? If yes please give the article or section.
Exactly the same as in a grounded system, except that there is no main bonding jumper.How is equipment grounding or bonding done in an UNGROUNDED SYSTEM?
There is no bonding jumper period, that it is why it is called a "Ungrounded Sytem. The whole idea is to prevent unnesecary outages from L-G faults. Ungrounded systems are used for mission critcal systems or life safety things like process control, drug manufacturing, elevators, pipelines, etc.poweringtech said:What do you mean that there is no bonding jumper? Should it be bonded in the service equipment? Or the the frame of the transformer?
I'll do one better, and post the NEC definition in Article 100:poweringtech said:What do you mean by a main bonding jumper? Please define what is main bonding jumper for you?
Bonding Jumper, Main. The connection between the grounded circuit conductor and the equipment grounding conductor at the service.
Poweringtech, the key is that without a neutral, the first energized fault to ground will not kick a breaker. All metal in the structure becomes energized.If you say the equipment grounding is the same for all types of system grounding, please explain how it is bonded together? Where will it terminate? Will it be in the service equipment?
(4) Path for Fault Current. Electrical equipment, wiring, and other electrically conductive material likely to become energized shall be installed in a manner that creates a permanent, low-impedance circuit from any point on the wiring system to the electrical supply source to facilitate the operation of overcurrent devices should a second fault occur on the wiring system. The earth shall not be considered as an effective fault-current path.
Yes every Meth lab should have one...dereckbc said:Ungrounded systems are used for mission critcal systems or life safety things like process control, drug manufacturing, elevators, pipelines, etc.
Have you read Article 250?What do you mean by a main bonding jumper? Please define what is main bonding jumper for you?
George, wouldn't it be more accurate to say that the first fault to ground will 'lock' the otherwise-floating two non-grounded phases to a voltage-to-earth equal to the phase-to-phase voltage?georgestolz said:. . . without a neutral, the first energized fault to ground will not kick a breaker. All metal in the structure becomes energized.
Maybe so, but the poster asked a NEC question, but does not seem to have any knowledge of the document.That was a little harsh, wasn't it?
No more so than when a system conductor is intentionally grounded.the key is that without a neutral, the first energized fault to ground will not kick a breaker. All metal in the structure becomes energized.
You're right. I've never dealt with an ungrounded system, so I tend to forget that without a earth connection at the utility side, there is no return path via earth to the source. A single phase touching the EGC would not "energize" the EGC in the way I commonly think of it.Don said:No more so than when a system conductor is intentionally grounded.
On the brighter side, he didn't seem to be asking how to build his own, so...Don said:Maybe so, but the poster asked a NEC question, but does not seem to have any knowledge of the document.