Ungrounded System

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By the way.....what kind of electrician lands a neutral to ground bond hot?
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Bob, I'd say that would be among the less controversial tasks I've seen done hot. Hopefully the guy that Larry was working with later came to more safe working habits.

People don't think about the consequences of a small mistake. The "are you chicken?" mentality persists today.
 
georgestolz said:
Bob, I'd say that would be among the less controversial tasks I've seen done hot.


It is dangerous.


If there is an existing ground fault down stream when you land it will flash.

It is possible that flash starts a flash over of the 480 feeders you have right in front of your face.
 
georgestolz said:
You impress me too, I don't understand what happened. :)
iwire said:
I am not following along either.
Allow me to explain:
Because the neutral wasn't bonded, the pinched-by-the-housing ballast wire became the "ground reference" for the system, and instead of the neutral being at zero volts to ground and the ballast wire being (let's say) 600v to ground, the opposite happened:

The panel neutral, which is normally at (or near) zero volts to ground (whether bonded or capacitively coupled), rose to the ballast's 600v output voltage, because the neutral is part of the lamp circuit. This is similar to what happens when the first phase of an ungrounded Delta faults to ground.

When we bonded the neutral, the EGC (in this case, the fixture housing and EMT) effectively tied the ballast wire and circuit neutral together, shorting that one wire to ground and extinguishing the fluorescent lamp. This is similar to the second phase an an ungrounded Delta faulting to ground.

iwire said:
If there is an existing ground fault down stream when you land it will flash.
Not in our case, as the ballast current wasn't high enough to cause that much damage, or even trip a breaker.

Make sense? If not, I'll make up a diagram.
 
Okay, here goes:

1) A typical 2-tube, 8' fluorescent with circuit-interrupting lampholders. Note that we have not bonded the neutral yet, so everything is floating at this point.

short1.jpg



2) Now, we short one of the ballast output wires to the fixture housing, and thus to the panel enclosure through the system EMT. There is a few hundred volts between the supply neutral and the ballast's blue wire, and thus between the neutral and the panel enclosure, aka ground.

The neutral bus in the panel exhibits this voltage to ground, but the light still works since there is no conductive pathway between the pinched ballast wire and the supply neutral.

short2.jpg



3) Now, we bond the neutral as required, and we have suddenly interconnected the ballast's blue wire and the supply neutral, effectively shorting out at least part of the fizture. I don't recall whether it was the blue or red wire, but I'm sure either one would extinguish at least one lamp.

short3.jpg



Please let me know if this doesn't do it. The next step would be a demonstration with a real fixture, but I'd rather not have to do that.

:)
 
LarryFine said:
as the ballast current wasn't high enough to cause that much damage, or even trip a breaker.

Make sense?

Yes it now makes sense, and demonstrates why you should not bond live.

The person landing the bond was lucky not to have gotten knocked on their butt.
 
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