sparky1976
Electrical
- Mar 12, 2001
- 87
Recently we've trip on our 33 kV feeder due to static wire dropped or fell on to overhead line.
The problem was the holder/stud dedicated for static wire is broken.
The temporary result of investigation, the stud is eaten by arcing to pole rebar (it's a concrete pole). My temporary conclusion is the rebar on the pole is not a good ground,so its eaten by arc and in long time the tension of wire snap the stud that already thin. The pole position is in the curve of the line.
Is it possible the induction voltage on static wire do such a thing ? (the pole is beetwen two grounding point of static wire)
Please advice.
The problem was the holder/stud dedicated for static wire is broken.
The temporary result of investigation, the stud is eaten by arcing to pole rebar (it's a concrete pole). My temporary conclusion is the rebar on the pole is not a good ground,so its eaten by arc and in long time the tension of wire snap the stud that already thin. The pole position is in the curve of the line.
Is it possible the induction voltage on static wire do such a thing ? (the pole is beetwen two grounding point of static wire)
Please advice.