OdessaEE
Electrical
- Jun 19, 2008
- 9
Here is the scenario:
There is a substation outside our gas facility (approximately 800'). We are running a set of conductors (6 -750MCM per phase underground) from a dedicated substation breaker to the main switchgear at the gas plant (MLO). This is the only connection to the substation from this facility. The transformer feeding the substation breaker is solidly grounded (they are considering installing a NGR). The breaker has 3 phase and ground fault protection only.
Here is my question:
There was no ground conductors ran from the substation to the plant switchgear. Is this required per the NEC? All the plant equipment is grounded adequately to the plant ground loop there is just no ground connection back to the substation. How does this change if there was a main breaker installed at the main switchgear at the plant instead of the MLO? Also if more than one piece of switchgear is fed from the breaker in the substation (tapped at the substation breaker).
I appreciate the help.
John
There is a substation outside our gas facility (approximately 800'). We are running a set of conductors (6 -750MCM per phase underground) from a dedicated substation breaker to the main switchgear at the gas plant (MLO). This is the only connection to the substation from this facility. The transformer feeding the substation breaker is solidly grounded (they are considering installing a NGR). The breaker has 3 phase and ground fault protection only.
Here is my question:
There was no ground conductors ran from the substation to the plant switchgear. Is this required per the NEC? All the plant equipment is grounded adequately to the plant ground loop there is just no ground connection back to the substation. How does this change if there was a main breaker installed at the main switchgear at the plant instead of the MLO? Also if more than one piece of switchgear is fed from the breaker in the substation (tapped at the substation breaker).
I appreciate the help.
John