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A Neutral, Common, or Ground.
There should be no voltage to ground on a delta system. That is the reason that these types of systems have to have a set of grounding lights to warn when the system inadvertently grounds. A delta system is a three wire connection, no neutral. A voltage to ground is only available on a three phase four wire (star or wye) connection system. The fourth wire being a neutral which is grounded thereby giving a voltage from each leg to neutral.
Just checked and it does have a ground connection.
If you are reading a voltage it is the drop across the resistance to ground. To get rid of the voltage get the resistance lower. This can be accomplished by installing more ground rods to the grounding system. Utility companies usually like 3 ohms to ground or less.
Firstly measure the voltage between your live and earth.Assuming you get ~120 volts here, the problem is a loose neutral somewhere along the line.If you get 24volts the problem is a bad earth connection, with a fault voltage on it.TBH it's most likely the former, as the latter implies 2 separate faults.
In the transformer at the secondry side one end of the winding will make star connection means 0 point there will be no voltage at that end if any leake voltage appear at that point it have to ground that what all the neutral points to be grounded
The formula to use is, phase voltage /1.73 = phase to neutral (ground) voltage.CommentThere is no such thing as a 'phase to phase', or 'phase to neutral' voltage. The correct terms are 'line to line' and 'line to neutral'. So the above answer should read: line voltage/1.73= line to neutral voltage = phase voltage.
When the neutral is connected to the ground they are at the same potential which is zero volts. If the neutral gets disconnected from the ground then a potential of 120 volts will be measured from the open neutral to ground. This voltage is being measured from the neutral side of the load that is on the circuit. because they are actually the same cable at sub station, but split by the time they come to the board, long answer involved but that's the jist of it!
A Neutral, Common, or Ground.
There should be no voltage to ground on a delta system. That is the reason that these types of systems have to have a set of grounding lights to warn when the system inadvertently grounds. A delta system is a three wire connection, no neutral. A voltage to ground is only available on a three phase four wire (star or wye) connection system. The fourth wire being a neutral which is grounded thereby giving a voltage from each leg to neutral.
There should be no voltage on the neutral wire to ground. This is a serious situation. Call a qualified electrician to check this out.
Just checked and it does have a ground connection.
There is normally no voltage on the neutral line because the neutral line is grounded. However, and this is always important, do not assume that neutral is grounded, nor that there is not an elevated voltage on neutral or ground due to a possible ground fault.
Yes,when the neutral potential is at ground potential i.e., 0v.
There should be zero voltage between neutral and ground.
If you are reading a voltage it is the drop across the resistance to ground. To get rid of the voltage get the resistance lower. This can be accomplished by installing more ground rods to the grounding system. Utility companies usually like 3 ohms to ground or less.
Voltage on ground can mean an open ground. It can also mean (high) current on ground, due to a ground fault such as reversed neutral and ground.