zimmerDN
Electrical
- Jan 17, 2013
- 34
By code and in common practice, is it necessary to have the same ground carried through from the source to the load?
The scenario is this, a 15KV/600V solidly grounded transformer, 600V power is distributed and protected by breakers. One segment of a 600V circuit travels some distance on single conductor overhead lines and doesn't have a ground wire. Eventually the overhead lines terminates at a service entrance at the new location and from that point the circuit is grounded again by being bonded to the building ground grid.
Will the breaker provide the proper protection since the grounding isn't continous from source to load?
What if this was a high resistance grounded transformer does it make a difference?
The scenario is this, a 15KV/600V solidly grounded transformer, 600V power is distributed and protected by breakers. One segment of a 600V circuit travels some distance on single conductor overhead lines and doesn't have a ground wire. Eventually the overhead lines terminates at a service entrance at the new location and from that point the circuit is grounded again by being bonded to the building ground grid.
Will the breaker provide the proper protection since the grounding isn't continous from source to load?
What if this was a high resistance grounded transformer does it make a difference?