jmbelectrical
Electrical
- Jul 16, 2011
- 126
I'm working on a tenant improvement project that was initially visited, documented, and photographed by another engineer. His notes indicate that the building and the tenant space are supplied by a 240/120-volt, three-phase, delta high-leg system. A photo of the tenant's exterior disconnect switch revealed that the three phase conductors serving tenant's panelboard were tagged as black, blue, and red. The absence of an orange tag on the "B" phase conductor had me suspicious, but it wasn't the first time I had encountered an installation that didn't comply with the NEC's high-leg marking requirements. I contacted the utility and they confirmed that the facility is indeed being provided by a 240/120-volt, three-phase, delta high-leg system.
Here's the part that is completely throwing me off: a photo of the tenant's panelboard shows a huge lineup of single-pole circuit breakers connected to all three phases. No doubt they're connected to lighting and receptacle loads. I could see fluorescent lighting with universal voltage, electronic ballasts operating on a 208-volt circuit, but surely any 120V cord-and-plug equipment connected to the "B" phase would have been damaged. I suppose that autotransformers could have been used to step-down the voltage from 208V to 120V where needed, but it seems highly unlikely. It's also, as far as I know, prohibited by the NEC to use the high-leg for phase-to-ground loads in the first place.
Any ideas?
Here's the part that is completely throwing me off: a photo of the tenant's panelboard shows a huge lineup of single-pole circuit breakers connected to all three phases. No doubt they're connected to lighting and receptacle loads. I could see fluorescent lighting with universal voltage, electronic ballasts operating on a 208-volt circuit, but surely any 120V cord-and-plug equipment connected to the "B" phase would have been damaged. I suppose that autotransformers could have been used to step-down the voltage from 208V to 120V where needed, but it seems highly unlikely. It's also, as far as I know, prohibited by the NEC to use the high-leg for phase-to-ground loads in the first place.
Any ideas?