steelerfan28655
Electrical
- May 6, 2004
- 40
I have been asked to consult on a new generator installation that is having startup problems. They have already fried two DC displays.
The system is installed at a primary metered facility that is fed 12470 from the utility. The feed has been re-routed to feed thru a 1500 kVA, 12470 GY to 480 GY transformer with the secondary connected to the output of the generator.
The problem they are having is this. The transformer secondary was bonded to ground, and the electrician also bonded the generator neutral inside the generator. The two ground grids were bonded together. When they started the generator, the circulating current in the ground-neutral loop was enough to fry the electronics in the generator.
After frying two units they called me. My suggestion was to remove the bonding strap in the genset and leave the bond in the transformer.They decided to follow the advice of another engineer with more experience, and removed the bonds at both ends and the neutral connection between the transformer and the generator.
My concern is the single-phase load at the facility now creating current on the downstream transformers(8 of them) with only the concentric on the underground cable as a return to the utility ground. Each downstream transformer is bonded to ground.
When the generator is in island mode, neutral current will only have the generator ground(through earth), which is not bonded to the neutral.
I have read some of the GY-GY connection threads on this site, and am still not sure what to suggest.
Happiness is a way of travel, not a destination.
The system is installed at a primary metered facility that is fed 12470 from the utility. The feed has been re-routed to feed thru a 1500 kVA, 12470 GY to 480 GY transformer with the secondary connected to the output of the generator.
The problem they are having is this. The transformer secondary was bonded to ground, and the electrician also bonded the generator neutral inside the generator. The two ground grids were bonded together. When they started the generator, the circulating current in the ground-neutral loop was enough to fry the electronics in the generator.
After frying two units they called me. My suggestion was to remove the bonding strap in the genset and leave the bond in the transformer.They decided to follow the advice of another engineer with more experience, and removed the bonds at both ends and the neutral connection between the transformer and the generator.
My concern is the single-phase load at the facility now creating current on the downstream transformers(8 of them) with only the concentric on the underground cable as a return to the utility ground. Each downstream transformer is bonded to ground.
When the generator is in island mode, neutral current will only have the generator ground(through earth), which is not bonded to the neutral.
I have read some of the GY-GY connection threads on this site, and am still not sure what to suggest.
Happiness is a way of travel, not a destination.