majesus
Electrical
- Aug 16, 2007
- 262
Hello,
We are installing a 69kV EPR incoming service cable from O/H lines to feed our plant. At the O/H power pole structure there is a 3 phase disconnect switch gang operated by a lever handle at ground level. The power pole is wood and sits in a steel pile. There are three ground rods, a #4/0 parameter grid and ground mat for the switch operator. The lever handle, system ground, ground mat are all bonded together and connected to the ground grid, grounds rods and pile. On the load side of the disconnect switch we've also
installed 72kV System (57kV MCOV) rated Metal Oxide Surge Arrestors to protect the 69kV cable. The question is what is best practice for the Arrestor's ground leads? Is it industrial standard to bring a separate #4/0 conductor from the grid and tie all three arrestor's ground leads or is a separate ground grid used? I'm worried about Step-touch potentials due to lightning or in case of a leaky arrestor.
Thanks,
Majesus
We are installing a 69kV EPR incoming service cable from O/H lines to feed our plant. At the O/H power pole structure there is a 3 phase disconnect switch gang operated by a lever handle at ground level. The power pole is wood and sits in a steel pile. There are three ground rods, a #4/0 parameter grid and ground mat for the switch operator. The lever handle, system ground, ground mat are all bonded together and connected to the ground grid, grounds rods and pile. On the load side of the disconnect switch we've also
installed 72kV System (57kV MCOV) rated Metal Oxide Surge Arrestors to protect the 69kV cable. The question is what is best practice for the Arrestor's ground leads? Is it industrial standard to bring a separate #4/0 conductor from the grid and tie all three arrestor's ground leads or is a separate ground grid used? I'm worried about Step-touch potentials due to lightning or in case of a leaky arrestor.
Thanks,
Majesus