The readings were made with a hand held clamp-on ammeter used primarily for locating ground faults on our system, meter is calibrated yearly by outside firm. The meter was clamped over a 3 phase CLX cable and then read. The cables range in length from 350 ft to 1200 ft. The one in question (13 amp reading) is one of a paralell 500 MCM feeder approximately 550 ft long, normal load on this service is about 500 amps. The 5KV lines are non-shielded, the 13.8 KV lines are shielded.
The cables were in normal service when metered.
The cable with the 13 amp reading has a PJC11 set at 200 amps to clear. Alas the ground CT's do not have an amp meter for display. This is on a main sub, the utility sub feeding this main sub is set at 400 amps to clear. Low impedance ground on this service.
Why the high (seemingly) settings? I am still investigating old works.