In article ,
Amos Keag wrote:
Maybe my terms are not up to date.
My electrical service connection is 3 wire 240 volts AC at 60 Hz. Within
the distribution panel RED is connected to one feed; BLACK is connected
to the other feed and white is connected to the common connection
[return]. The common connection is then distributed throughout the house
as the bare wire in standard wiring. The common, white and return,
connection is connected to an external earth connection [ground] by an 8
foot ground rod.. So, the WHITE wire serves as return for both RED and
BLACK circuits and has a single earth connection. So, your 3 prong
socket contains connections to power as follows: HOT [either RED or
BLACK] circuit, RETURN [WHITE] and GREEN [GROUND] [supposedly zero
current carrying. A GFI works on this part of the connection].
In the ASTRON RS 35 the primary wiring has the GREEN connected to the
chassis. The BLACK/WHITE go to the transformer primary. This is fine.
Yes, that's all fine, and per code.
In US wiring terminology, the green wire is "ground". It's present
entirely for safety purposes - it's not supposed to carry any current
back to the panel during normal operation. It carries current only
in the event of a fault. It's what the external chassis should be
tied to, for metal-chassis equipment with a three-wire cord.
Black is "hot". I'm told that this color was chosen because black is
traditionally the color of death.
White is "neutral". It's the current return for the hot supply. It
should never be tied to the chassis, for two reasons:
[1] The occasional hot/ground reversal thanks to an mistake in the
house wiring. You really don't want your chassis floating at 120 VAC
above local ground.
[2] The neutral pin at the outlet can be pulled several volts above
ground voltage, if some load on that circuit is drawing a healthy
number of amperes, due to I^2*R drop in the house wiring. If the
chassis were tied to neutral, and this occurred, someone might
manage to get a shock if they touched both the chassis and a
truly-grounded pipe or wire.
With a nearby lightning strike that blew the utility 3 phase transformer
and affected approximately 50 consumers there are several possible
causes of trouble. Among these are imbalance in utility service [i.e.
the 240 into the house becomes seriously imbalanced] a lightning induced
magnetic transient that couples to all ground loops, or my system was
still connected to antennas and power.
I had ALL connections to antennas and power plugs removed except the 1/2
inch copper pipe earth connection at the service panel. My neighbors
lost garage door openers, multiple tv sets, numerous telephone circuits,
numerous internet circuits, COMCAST had to rewire approximately 1/4 mile
of cable tv in front of the house, several homes lost expensive stereo
and sound lab setups. In my house all ground fault interuptors
activated. And two circuits in my PRO II exploded to charcoal with dust
and stench. The LAN blew up, and one computer was lost.
Ouch! My condolences!
When a strike of that magnitude occurs nearby, I have a feeling that
the Law of Chaos prevails. The current will do whatever it (censored)
well wants to. Even some equipment which is entirely unplugged might
take enough of a pulse via induction to suffer some damage to
sensitive components.
Glad to hear that you managed to recover the cost of replacement!
--
Dave Platt AE6EO
Hosting the Jade Warrior home page:
http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior
I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will
boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads!