charlierod
Electrical
- Mar 16, 2004
- 71
I work for at a production facility for a petroleum company. We have an uninterruptible power supply UPS feeding an offices block (computers, printers, communication systems and so on). The UPS is supplied through a 480/208 D/y transformer (secondary solidly grounded plus neutral conductor). I measured neutral and ground currents and found that the values are almost equal (2 Amperes). Furthermore, those currents were found to be triplen harmonics (180 Hz) althogh their values were negligible when compared to phase currents (65 Amperes,60 Hz). The question is, Why neutral and grounding conductors carry similar currents?. Could be that situation dangerous despite the low values of the currents?. I think that a bond between neutral and ground might be downstream the transformer, What's your opinion?
All comments and suggestions are welcome