T
T.M.Haja Sahib
Guest
Maybe I overlooked it
:slaphead::slaphead:
:lol:
Last edited:
Maybe I overlooked it
:slaphead::slaphead:
It might have been completely unrelated to the actual welding.I just wanted to explore the possibility of death by ground leakage current due to welding return current on the basis of that fatal accident, as there is no way to establish the actual cause of that welder's death due to lack of sufficient data at hand.
It might have been completely unrelated to the actual welding.
Google Welder's Death.
"Warnings not to do any welding went unheeded and an explosion that killed a welder.."
"A 38-year-old male arc welder died as a result of an explosion at a construction company."
"Gaywood welder's death was smoking-related"
"A WELDER who worked in nuclear power plants wore asbestos-lined clothing for protection ? but it ended up killing him."
etc
And there's no guarantee that the newspaper reported it correctly anyway (see post#39).
So I think it's a dead duck.
But I am afraid you missed my point.
I just wanted to explore the possibility of death by ground leakage current due to welding return current on the basis of that fatal accident, as there is no way to establish the actual cause of that welder's death due to lack of sufficient data at hand.
Here is a link for your kind reference:
http://nasdonline.org/document/1858...n-electrocuted-while-welding-feed-bunker.html
See the last paragraph of 'Recommendations/discussion'. The report states that there is hazard due to ground leakage current between the welder and work that can not be detected by a GFCI.It is because that ground leakage current flows back to the transformer secondary via the work lead/exposed work lead splice lying on ground and so the GFCI can not detect it.This can also be a factor for the fatal accident of post #12.
We all have missed your point .
..... the second thing it in error they stated that the current flowed back to the welder through earth, no it flowed back to the uninsulated splice in the welding cable that was in contact with earth that gave the secondary reference to earth,
No.The report is correct.The current flowed through the earth and returned to the welder through the uninsulated splice in the welding cable that was in contact with earth.
See the post#12 again.The grill work on which the welder was working was fixed to the ground.The work lead from the transformer secondary was fixed at a remote corner in the grill.This gave the ground reference as above.I already stated this in my previous posts.But you did not take it into account.Now do it.Also remember the condition of ground being damp.So there is bound to be ground leakage current as in the above case.Do you understand this or not?
I want to bring to your kind information that the Briggs-Meyyer personality test revealed that there exist many personality types.Their way of thinking can be entirely different,So your contention'we all missed your point' can not be true.
OK, you are correct, only the normal have missed your point, the abnormal understand you perfectly.:thumbsup:
Do you find any causative factors common between fatal accidents mentioned in post #43 and post #12 or not ?I was replying to your post #43 not post #12 in which you provided the link to which I read, I stand by my post as a response to your post #43, I agree that when a welder connects the lead to work that has a reference to earth then there is a reference to earth, but the path is not directly back to the welder, it is through earth to the work then through the work lead to the welder transformer, in a case as this it is the responsibility of the welder to not parallel himself between earth and the welding lead (stinger) as this can and will produce a shock.
Given the parlous state of the rest of the equipment, A GFCI wouldn't have worked. The report states that.See the last paragraph of 'Recommendations/discussion'. The report states that there is hazard due to ground leakage current between the welder and work that can not be detected by a GFCI.It is because that ground leakage current flows back to the transformer secondary via the work lead/exposed work lead splice lying on ground and so the GFCI can not detect it.This can also be a factor for the fatal accident of post #12.
So some speculation going on here.The welder was an old Hobart brand A.C. arc welder (See Figure 1). The welder's power cord covering and insulation was damaged which exposed the conductors (See Figure 3). The welder cables were not available to the MIFACE researchers. The condition of the cable insulation is unknown.........The second set of welding cables that were "spliced" to the first set was also not available for inspection.
One might thus conclude that the output voltage was significantly lower than the input voltage. High enough to fatally electrocute the victim?
An equally plausible explanation might be that the exposed 240V conductors contacted the output side and raised the potential to that level and that's maybe what caused the problem.
Unrelated to the actual welding.
Maybe, maybe not. Poor accidental connections often do not flow enough current to cause an OCPD to open....
A contradiction because the transformer secondary lead was touching the damp ground through the open splice and should the transformer primary made contact with the secondary,the primary over current protective device would have operated and the fatal accident would have been avoided.
Maybe, maybe not. Poor accidental connections often do not flow enough current to cause an OCPD to open.
And sufficient voltage. Was there sufficient voltage?Even low voltage can kill,given damp conditions.
You would need a pretty good ground connection to get fault current to flow. A bare connection just lying on damp ground is hardly likely to act like a ground rod buried in it.A contradiction because the transformer secondary lead was touching the damp ground through the open splice and should the transformer primary made contact with the secondary,the primary over current protective device would have operated and the fatal accident would have been avoided.
Why is it eliminated? The current required to cause a fatal electrocution is certainly going to much lower than the setting of any overcurrent device supplying the welder.To arrive at a simple explanation of that accident,assume enough current could flow and so, that possibility is eliminated.
Why is it eliminated? The current required to cause a fatal electrocution is certainly going to much lower than the setting of any overcurrent device supplying the welder.
I think your point about the primary overcurrent device operating is most likely incorrect.
You can be right.I just want to know if I can also be right.That is all.