gozoliet
Computer
- Mar 10, 2010
- 4
We've just finished construction on our new office building, and have noticed the lights flickering frequently throughout the day. Had the utility company to measure and test everything and they claim it's within our building.
On several occasions I've measured a roughly 8V drop (for example from 116V to 108V) that lasts 5-10 seconds on a120V outlet. I have visually confirmed that one of those drops happened when the lights flickered.
I'm waiting to get my hands on a data logger to measure at the panels. In the meantime I managed to convince the utility to send me their data log from when they measured just inside our meter. I'm seeing a lot of 20V spikes on the 340V (see graph) during business hours, which probably coincide with what I'm measuring at the outlet.
Utility acknowledged the spikes on their graph, but claim that they still fall within their "allowable range" so shouldn't be a problem. I concede that the power can move within a wide range, but the sudden fluctuations seem like a problem to me. Can anyone comment?
On several occasions I've measured a roughly 8V drop (for example from 116V to 108V) that lasts 5-10 seconds on a120V outlet. I have visually confirmed that one of those drops happened when the lights flickered.
I'm waiting to get my hands on a data logger to measure at the panels. In the meantime I managed to convince the utility to send me their data log from when they measured just inside our meter. I'm seeing a lot of 20V spikes on the 340V (see graph) during business hours, which probably coincide with what I'm measuring at the outlet.
Utility acknowledged the spikes on their graph, but claim that they still fall within their "allowable range" so shouldn't be a problem. I concede that the power can move within a wide range, but the sudden fluctuations seem like a problem to me. Can anyone comment?