healyx
Electrical
- Apr 7, 2009
- 115
Hi,
For a LV generator (400V output) that feeds a TNC-S earthing system where 4 cables leave the generator (3 phases and 1 PEN (combined Protective earth and Neutral)). The neutral on the generator is also bonded to the earth electrode.
Is it correct to say that Line to Neutral faults in the installation will involve the zero sequence impedance of the generator? I was reading some literature that said only a Line to Ground fault involved the zero sequence impedance, which just didn't seem right to me.
Can anyone confirm this?
The main point to my question is that I always thought Line to Neutral and Line to Ground faults are usually higher for generators than 3 phase faults. If a line to neutral fault no longer involved the zero sequence impedance, this would no longer hold (for L-N anyway).
For a LV generator (400V output) that feeds a TNC-S earthing system where 4 cables leave the generator (3 phases and 1 PEN (combined Protective earth and Neutral)). The neutral on the generator is also bonded to the earth electrode.
Is it correct to say that Line to Neutral faults in the installation will involve the zero sequence impedance of the generator? I was reading some literature that said only a Line to Ground fault involved the zero sequence impedance, which just didn't seem right to me.
Can anyone confirm this?
The main point to my question is that I always thought Line to Neutral and Line to Ground faults are usually higher for generators than 3 phase faults. If a line to neutral fault no longer involved the zero sequence impedance, this would no longer hold (for L-N anyway).