Why is the primary neutral of T1 kept ungrounded?
I am going to repeat something here that you already know, prc.
You are not the only one reading this and I want to be clear for the sake of others who come here for learning.
Please be patient.
Thanks.
The primary neutral may easily be grounded but grounding is not the issue.
The lack of a neutral connection to the source is the issue.
Imagine a television set that draws 1.2 Amps at 120 Volts, connected in series with an electric kettle that draws 12 Amps at 120 Volts.
That series connection is now supplied with 240 Volts.
Do the math.
Simple math tells us that the voltage division will be about 10:1,
The kettle will see about 21.8 Volts and the TV will see about 218 Volts.
I have seen this several times.
The TV set dies.
A universal connection in North America is both 120 Volt loads and 240 Volt loads fed from center tapped 120/240 Volt transformers.
Now in our example, if the transformer center tap is grounded, it makes no difference to the voltages to the loads.
And in our example, if the series connection point between the two loads is grounded, the voltages across the loads become voltages to ground, but it makes no difference to the voltages to the loads.
What is needed is a connection from the source, that is the transformer center tap, to the point of connection between both loads.
If the load neutral is properly connected to the source neutral, the voltages at the loads will be stable, regardless of whether the neutral is grounded or ungrounded.
Why this lengthy discourse on a tangent subject?
We are assuming that the term "Ungrounded" is distribution jargon and implies that the neutral is not connected to the source.
Back on subject:
Why is the neutral not grounded (connected to the source neutral)?
It is very possible that the source has no neutral to connect to.
How is that possible?
The source may be a delta connected generator or transformer secondary.
Case in point, the power plant in the micro-grid that I used to oversee:
The number of generators online depended on the load.
One of our generators was delta connected.
When the loading was very light that may be the only generator online.
Fortunately we had two industrial customers with wye:delta banks that stabilized our voltages when no source neutral was available.
If no source neutral connection is possible, the text book solution is a special order zig-zag grounding transformer.
The down and dirty solution is three distribution transformers connected wye:delta.
The cost is often lower.
Initial equipment and possible future replacements are often available "Off the Shelf" and if not, lead times are short.
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Ohm's law
Not just a good idea;
It's the LAW!