rockman7892
Electrical
- Apr 7, 2008
- 1,171
I am fairly new to the idea of residual grounding and was hoping to gain some better insight. I have a 3-wire three phase 480V system. I recently have come across a breaker on this system that is using a residual grouning configuration with 3 CT's.
I am used to seeing zero sequence CT's where the current in on each pahse is balanced by the others and the total sum of current at any time in the zero sequence CT window is 0. Even if the phase currents are unbalanced in a zero sequence CT the summation of these currents is still zero because of the fact that what goes in one phase must be balance out by the other two.
With residual grounding, does the same case apply that the current of one pase is balanced by another even if the phase currents are not equal? For instance if I had line current os A=100 B=90 C=110, would I still see an overall sum of 0A when added together in a resuidual gounding scheme?
What if instead of a 3-wire system, I had a 4-wire system with a nuetral? If I had unbalanced currents would the three phase currents stil cancel when summed at a point or would some of this current return on the nuetral?