Re: Ungrounded System
Originally posted by georgestolz:
In the event of a ground fault in an ungrounded system, is there potential on all metallic equipment until the fault is repaired?
George, to expand upon the two previous responses, I would first ask you "potential between what two points or surfaces?"
If you mean between the metallic components and earth, I'd say "no", because grounding and bonding is still done, and for the same reasons: minimazing potential difference between different surfaces.
When a ground fault occurs on one phase on an otherwise-ungrounded system, the voltage on the other phases suddenly snaps to the phase-to-phase voltage above ground, as if intentionally grounded.
Then you have what is effectively a corner-grounded delta system, and the previously-ungrounded system would respond to a second phase ground fault just as a corner-grounded system would to one.
In the meantime, any non-current-carrying parts should have a low-impedance conductive pathway to all the usual grounding points: earth, building metal, pipe systems, anything "likely to become energized", etc.
Here's a slightly-similar experience I had as a helper, many moons ago: we installed a 3-phase 480/277-Y to 208/120-Y transformer and panel for a warehouse, along with fluorescent lighting.
The mechanic I was working with hadn't grounded the panel neutral before we energized the system. The lights all worked fine, until we noticed that one fixture cut off when the bonding jumper sparked.
I immediately deduced that one of the fixture's ballast output wires was pinched to the fixture housing. The floating panel neutral had a potential to ground equal to the ballast output.
There was no shock hazard because the transformer frame and panel enclosure were grounded, even though the neutral was "hot" until bonded. That's why neutrals are insulated just like hot conductors.
Grounding a neutral forces the hot wires to be a set voltage to earth. Sure, there's potential (sorry!) for shock, but it minimizes higher voltages during accidental primary-to-secondary faults.