willj
Electrical
- Jun 11, 2003
- 8
Hi All,
Would like to know if anyone could offer their observations of the heating involved with a underground cable fault, either 240 or 480V.
I am having an issue where I would like to understand how much heating could possibly occur.
This would be for a supply service on the secondary side of a distribution trans, before the service entrance.
This would be a high impedence fault that would not trip any protection, so the fault could exist for an extended period of time.
So, how hot could the ground get around the cable fault and at the surface. Buried 1 ft or 3 ft below grade?
I would appreciate any links to reports, pictures, or first hand experience.
I suspect the fault "zone" of earth would get quite hot.
Would it melt objects around the fault? Hot enough to start a ground fire?
Thanks in advance for any comments.
Will...
Would like to know if anyone could offer their observations of the heating involved with a underground cable fault, either 240 or 480V.
I am having an issue where I would like to understand how much heating could possibly occur.
This would be for a supply service on the secondary side of a distribution trans, before the service entrance.
This would be a high impedence fault that would not trip any protection, so the fault could exist for an extended period of time.
So, how hot could the ground get around the cable fault and at the surface. Buried 1 ft or 3 ft below grade?
I would appreciate any links to reports, pictures, or first hand experience.
I suspect the fault "zone" of earth would get quite hot.
Would it melt objects around the fault? Hot enough to start a ground fire?
Thanks in advance for any comments.
Will...