. They were using a calibrated fluke dvom that was supposed to be able to read milliohms but I think they should have been using a dlro or micro-ohmmeter.
I agree. Fluke multimeter is not a 4-wire measurement. Minor deviations in connection resistance will disrupt the measurement. Try taking five readings in a row on the same phase, removing the clips and putting them back slightly differently in between measurements...I'll bet you'll see a pretty high variability.
And my question was what effects in other characteristics (voltage, current) would I likely see if there was a phase resistance imbalance. Thanks for all your responses.
My best practical advice is given above (if you want to rule out doubts for a critical motor, then repeat the measurement… if nothing else because you have not accomplished what you set out to do by checking resistances to begin with). But answering your question to my best ability: I think a condition of concern on the motor that showed up as resistive unbalance would
most likely show up as current unbalance (but I don't have complete certainty on that).
What could cause resistive unbalance (other than measurement error): 1 - shorted turn, 2 - open parallel circuit, 3 - high resistance connection internal to the motor (assuming you have ruled out external high resistance by measuring directly at the motor).
1 - Would shorted turn lead to current unbalance? Shorted turn USUALLY leads to motor trip in very short order. But there are a few case studies reported here and there where a random wound motor operates with shorted turn for awhile. We ourselves had motor operate with shorted turn for awhile on ungrounded system (but it was also accompanied by ground). Would shorted turn lead to current unbalance? Most likely yes.
2 - Would open parallel path lead in one phase lead to current unbalance. Most likely yes.
3 - Would high resistance in one phase lead to current unbalance? (again we would be talking about potentially a faulty connection internal to the motor). Typically a dramatically high resistance in one phase (lug severely overheated on the verge of failure) will show up in a current unbalance. BUT we're not necessarily talking about a dramatically different resistance... only 8% resistive unbalance on a winding that might only be 0.1 ohm or so to begin with. Maybe this one is more of a coin-flip... the least likely of the three to show up in current unbalance by my guesstimation.
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(2B)+(2B)' ?