A tale of woe, including carelessness, stupidity and laziness....
Jay Jaeger
cube1 at charter.net
Wed Aug 26 16:18:48 CDT 2015
On 8/26/2015 2:33 PM, Paul Koning wrote:
>
>> On Aug 26, 2015, at 3:16 PM, Jay Jaeger <cube1 at charter.net> wrote:
>>
>> On 8/26/2015 8:19 AM, Paul Koning wrote:
>>>
>>> I heard of this sort of thing happening to the DEC building at Marlboro. Supposedly it had two mains entrances, served from different power lines (and different companies? Seems odd). One of the machine rooms had feeds from both ends, and one particular system was fed from both. What happened is that the "grounds" were offset enough, and with enough of a current supply, that the ground strap that's supposed to connect the row of RP06 drives melted.
>>>
>>> This sort of thing is a major electric code violation: you can certainly have multiple services, but all the grounds are required to be connected by substantial wire; you're not allowed to stick ground rods in at multiple places and leave it at that. (The same goes for lightning rods.)
>>>
>>> paul
>>>
>>
>> Quite possibly two different phases, and if so, the would be 90 degrees
>> out of phase with each other.
>
> 90? Three phase power is 120 degrees apart, center-tapped "two phase" home power is 180 degrees, but I don't know of any power company service that produces 90 degree shifts.
>
Yes, of course: 120 degrees. D'oh.
> In any case, RP06s use three phase power. The issue wasn't the power in this particular story, but rather the ground wire (the green "protective ground" that isn't supposed to carry current at all under normal operation).
>
> paul
>
>
I understand. Different shocks for different folks. ;)
JRJ
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