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collies99 said:Capacitive coupling between the primary to secondary winding can make it more unsafe and a higher shock potential hazard.
timm33333 said:so vector control of variable speed drives will not work properly in case ground fault occurs when PT primary is ungrounded
Completely untrue. Any decent relay can calculate the sequence components from the phase voltages and use (3)V0 values in the protection calculations. It just requires that the system side of the VT have the wye-point grounded.krisys said:The zero-sequence voltage on the VT secondary can be derived only if you have a broken delta secondary side connection.
timm33333 said:Solidly grounding the neutral of VT-primary makes sense, but the problem is that the manufacturer of neutral grounding resistor (NGR) requires the primary of VT to be ungrounded
The PTs will now reflect ground fault conditions.Verify proper installation of the ground-fault current
sensor. Ensure the cables pass through the ground-
fault-current-sensor window
.
timm33333 said:Actually the manufacturer is saying that if you ground the primary of VT, it will act as an alternate path and will bypass the current, and the current will not pass through the neutral grounding resistor at all.
What do you guys think about it?
timm33333 said:But some people think that if the primary of PT's is ungrounded, the relay might mistakenly start reading Phase to Phase 208V voltage from PT-secondary (instead of phase to ground 120V).
timm33333 said:And as the transformer feeds variable speed drives and the transformer neutral is high resistance grounded, so vector control of variable speed drives will not work properly in case ground fault occurs when PT primary is ungrounded. Is it correct?
A grdY-grdY connected VT is not a ground source, so there will no contribution to a ground fault from the VT. Unless you connect a neutral as well as a ground to the VT secondary, it will not be shorting out the NER. You wouldn't be running a neutral on a resistance grounded circuit anyway, so that would not be a possibility.LiteYear said:I'm surprised this is not widely recognised. You absolutely cannot introduce additional low impedance grounding locations on a resistance grounded network. You're effectively shorting out the NER. Y-Y PTs are a perfect example.