alehman
Electrical
- May 23, 1999
- 2,624
I have a outdoor utility-owned pad-mounted transformer, 480Y/277 4-wire secondary, serving a switchboard in a building via cable in underground conduit. The transformer is located very close to the building.
The utility requires a ground ring surrounding the transformer, which is bonded to the neutral at the transformer as required by code. There is also a buried ground ring surrounding the building which is bonded to the service disconnect ground bus.
My concern is that we have two grounding electrode systems with a few feet of each other that are not connected except via the service neutral conductors between the transformer and service disconnect. This seems wrong. Should I be concerned about step or touch potential between the transformer and the building?
If we connect the building and transformer ground rings directly, then the grounding system conductors will be effectively in parallel with the neutral. This project is in the U.S. and under NEC rules.
Alan
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"It’s always fun to do the impossible." - Walt Disney
The utility requires a ground ring surrounding the transformer, which is bonded to the neutral at the transformer as required by code. There is also a buried ground ring surrounding the building which is bonded to the service disconnect ground bus.
My concern is that we have two grounding electrode systems with a few feet of each other that are not connected except via the service neutral conductors between the transformer and service disconnect. This seems wrong. Should I be concerned about step or touch potential between the transformer and the building?
If we connect the building and transformer ground rings directly, then the grounding system conductors will be effectively in parallel with the neutral. This project is in the U.S. and under NEC rules.
Alan
----
"It’s always fun to do the impossible." - Walt Disney