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Broken common neutral wire in the access electrical panel: danger of overvoltage

 


Broken common neutral wire in the access electrical panel: danger of overvoltageWhy can a broken common ground wire in the access electrical panel cause an increase in the mains voltage? How is this dangerous? How to avoid this?

Excess voltage in a household electrical network - not at all uncommon. Instead of rated 220 volts, much more can happen in apartment outlets. There may be many reasons for this, but the most common is breakage of the common zero working wire in the access switchboard.

Residential apartment buildings are usually powered by a three-phase 380 V network with a dullly grounded neutral. This means that at the entrance to all floors stretch “risers” - vertically laid wires of large cross-section.

There are at least four such wires — three phases and a working “zero” connected to the grounded neutral point of the supply transformer, whose windings are connected to a “star”. In new homes there is also a fifth wire - a protective "zero", designed to ground luminaires and housings of household appliances.

Between any of the phase wires and the neutral wire there is a constant potential difference - 220 V, and this position does not depend on the asymmetry of the load. That is, regardless of how many apartments are powered by each phase and how many electrical appliances are currently on in each of these apartments, the voltage in each outlet will always be the same. This is ensured by the fact that the potential of the neutral wire is tied to the potential of the earth, conditionally assumed to be zero and cannot be changed.

But if a zero working wire suddenly breaks off in the common entrance electrical panel (for example, it burns out or falls off due to poor-quality installation), the picture changes significantly. Now the zero wires of all apartments connected to this shield do not have any electrical connection to the ground, and, therefore, their potential can change.

Figuratively speaking, the electric current, not having the opportunity to go to the grounded neutral point of the transformer, “seeks its own way more freely”. He seems more free dear phasein which many consumers are included, and in which the electrical resistance of the wiring is currently small. In such a phase, when the common ground wire is torn off, the current will be large, and the voltage will “sink”, decrease, and the potential of the neutral point of the network will “go sideways”.

If something decreases somewhere, then it always arrives in another place - this is an undeniable law of nature. Here, in this case, a decrease in voltage in one phase threatens to increase it in another, less loaded. This ends, of course, disastrously. In apartments connected to the unfortunate phase, which is experiencing increased voltage, in the literal sense of the word, household appliances are burning, lamp lamps are out of order, and even a fire is possible. Watch - What happens on the network when a zero break occurs (vector diagrams of normal and emergency modes).

To avoid these troubles, it is necessary to monitor the condition of the electric risers and input cables. This applies, first of all, to housing and communal services workers who are responsible for the good condition of the electric facilities. But the owners of residential premises should not rely on someone's vigilance.

As one of the precautionary measures, you can offer installation in electrical panels individual modular surge arresters. Such a device will not allow your equipment to burn from a voltage surge, including that caused by a break in the common zero wire.

See also on this topic:How to protect the apartment from overvoltage

Alexander Molokov

See also at bgv.electricianexp.com:

  • Zero line break protection
  • Why does the switch open the phase, not the zero?
  • How to find phase and zero? Several methods for determining phase and zero pr ...
  • What is symmetrical and asymmetric load?
  • Why is the neutral wire heated

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    Comments:

    # 1 wrote: | [quote]

     
     

    Last year, in our hostel, refrigerators, televisions, and other appliances began to burn in people. I immediately checked the tester with a voltage in the socket - 280 volts, after an hour it was already 190 volts. So it constantly jumped. Light bulbs shone on the floor, then burned out. The hostel electrician was looking for damage for 2 days. Then it turned out - there was no contact of the zero wire in the switchboard. So everything that is written in this article is very real and is not a rare case. It’s just that the hostel is very old, the wiring in it, too, and at the time when it was designed there was no such powerful equipment in each room, the power spread across the phases was small and the current passed through the zero wire. Now, through the neutral wire, the current is decent, since through zero the spread of currents in individual phases is compensated. Therefore, the probability of zero burning in houses with old wiring made by wires in small sections is very real. In my Khrushchev’s father, my aluminum wire lies in a 1.5 mm cross section. In any case, you need to somehow try to defend yourself against the possibility of a zero wire break.

     
    Comments:

    # 2 wrote: Anton | [quote]

     
     

    To protect lighting devices and household appliances from overvoltage and voltage dips, you can use the voltage control relay, which sets the maximum and minimum voltage thresholds and delay time, in the event of a break in the neutral wire, the voltage can increase very sharply, in this case you can install a relay, it It has an output switchable group, which can be used to switch a contactor, etc.

     
    Comments:

    # 3 wrote: Vlad | [quote]

     
     

    I once conducted a demonstration experiment for fellow electricians who could not understand what happens when a zero break ... I connected three lampholders with an incandescent lamp in a “star” with a common zero point, with the same lamp power and turning off the zero, the lamps did not glow changed, and if the lamp was placed on one of the beams of lower power, then it burned out with a bang ...

    That is, everything is as you described ...

     
    Comments:

    # 4 wrote: andy78 | [quote]

     
     

    The presence of a neutral wire does not play a role only with a completely symmetrical load, for example, when a three-phase asynchronous motor is connected to the network. In the TOE course there is such a laboratory work. The load (bulbs on the stand) is collected in a star (6 bulbs in each phase), the phase voltage is measured, and then in one of the phases you need to turn off 2-3 bulbs. In a less loaded phase, the voltage increases, in the remaining phases it decreases. If the circuit contains a neutral wire, then no manipulation of the bulbs does not cause a voltage change.

     
    Comments:

    # 5 wrote: | [quote]

     
     

    and if you connect the zero terminal block to the shield body, that is, ground it?

     
    Comments:

    # 6 wrote: | [quote]

     
     

    Itself got on this malfunction - the equipment burned out, and then the refrigerator! I recommend using overvoltage protection in the apartment UZM-50M, UZM-51M.

     
    Comments:

    # 7 wrote: | [quote]

     
     

    In April 2013 in the suburbs of Kiev Vishnevoy burned out a zero in the substation that feeds a bunch of apartment buildings. About 1,000 apartments were affected.

     
    Comments:

    # 8 wrote: | [quote]

     
     

    Ruslan,
    An individual (apartment) zero block, in the absence of a generator zero point (break), is not in itself fraught with danger. Household appliances if they fail, but not because of increased voltage. True, there are times when another apartment "sits" on your shred, which is fraught with a number of consequences. The main neutral conductor, one way or another, is connected to the ground, but the state of the grounding armature (if any) laid in the ground decades ago is a big question.