BMS-Electrician
Member
- Location
- Los Angeles
- Occupation
- Electrician
Warehouse in SoCal, (industrial complex with about 12 units in a building). The main switch gear (meter board) is 277/480 800A and is protected by main fuses. There is a meter and a 200A fuse block for each warehouse unit.
The customer (a tenant of one of the units) had a fuse blow on their unit and replaced it. the next day it blew again (it was the middle fuse both times). This time, when pushing the fuse block in, there was a very significant arc, the guy's hand has minor burns on it. That's when he called me.
When I arrived, the two outer fuses were blown (with very clear signs of arcing on the contact points of the fuse block) but the middle one was NOT blown, however, the Middle fuse on the MAIN SERVICE was blown.
Long story short, we found a direct short on the feeders (middle phase) in a junction box where a splice had been made and they did not use insulating tape, just electrical tape, and it was arcing against the cover of the junction box. We fixed the short, replaced the blown fuses (including the 800A main), cleaned the damaged contacts and they were up and running. 2 hours total.
Close examination proved that the fuse block contacts could not contact anything they weren't supposed to. The customer assured me that all breakers were off when he was installing his fuses (they were certainly off when I arrived). Why did it arc like that?
The customer (a tenant of one of the units) had a fuse blow on their unit and replaced it. the next day it blew again (it was the middle fuse both times). This time, when pushing the fuse block in, there was a very significant arc, the guy's hand has minor burns on it. That's when he called me.
When I arrived, the two outer fuses were blown (with very clear signs of arcing on the contact points of the fuse block) but the middle one was NOT blown, however, the Middle fuse on the MAIN SERVICE was blown.
Long story short, we found a direct short on the feeders (middle phase) in a junction box where a splice had been made and they did not use insulating tape, just electrical tape, and it was arcing against the cover of the junction box. We fixed the short, replaced the blown fuses (including the 800A main), cleaned the damaged contacts and they were up and running. 2 hours total.
Close examination proved that the fuse block contacts could not contact anything they weren't supposed to. The customer assured me that all breakers were off when he was installing his fuses (they were certainly off when I arrived). Why did it arc like that?