Suggestion to jghrist (Electrical) Apr 23, 2003 marked ///\\This is not a high resistance grounded system.
///Yes, agree, however, the ground current is small similarly to the high resistance grounding. Compare 10A to 78A and line currents over 1000A\\ The transformer has an ungrounded neutral.
///Never disputed and many times repeated\\ There will be no zero-sequence current.
///See Reference:
William D. Stevenson, Jr., Elements of Power System Analysis, 3rd edition, McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1975,
Equation: 12.18
Iao=(Ia + Ib + Ic)/3= constant different from zero
Let
Ia=Ix1
Ib=Ix2
Ic=Ix3
and from the original posting:
I leg1 = 1115A=Ia=Ix1
I leg2 = 1000A=Ib=Ix2
I leg3 = 1092A=Ic=Ix3
Now simply, Ia is different from Ib and Ib is different from Ic and Ic is different from Ia, therefore, Ia + Ib + Ic is not equal to zero. Ia,Ib,Ic are considered complex or phasors.
Transformer terminal X2 has a current Ix2 flowing to the load. It also has Ig=78A flowing into X2 as a ground current return. Then, winding X2 to transformer neutral carries Ix1+Ix3 currents. Therefore, X2 terminal becomes the transformer shifted neutral with currents Ix1, Ix2, Ix3, and Ig for symmetrical component modeling that includes the ground current 3 x Io.
Simply, for a star with 120degre angle shifts,
Io=0=(I/0deg + I/120deg + I/240deg)/3, which is not the case for:
(1115/0deg + 1000/120deg + 1092/240deg)/3=Io different from zero. Therefore, the Ig is different from zero and equal to Ig=3Io, and Ix1+Ix2+Ix3=Ia+Ib+Ic=Ig different from zero at X2. The transformer wye connection neutral has Ia+Ib+Ic=0, however, it is an improper point to use for the modeling of the transformer with X2 grounded with Ig flowing into X2. I do not recommend the modeling that neglects Ig if it is different from zero. There may be significant ramifications to it in some applications.\\