trihydrate
Mechanical
- Mar 23, 2002
- 22
I worked on a 120 VAC system that had a water conductivity instrument with a 125 mA time delay fuse that had been blown. I first replaced the instrument and after 30 hours, the second instrument's fuse had blown. A 250 mA fuse was installed and it blew immediately. I placed a DMM on the power lines to the instrument, set it for voltage and selected "Max Hold". For a few minutes, the reading climbed slowly from 122.2 V to 122.8 V. As some other equipment, a solenoid, some lights etc. started operating, the DMM suddenly went to 132.1 V. After a few seconds, the DMM went to 142.2 V.
Suspecting a shorting to another phase, I reviewed the supply wiring, and confirmed their was no shorting. What I found was the 20 amp circuit breaker in the distribution panel had been forceably installed with the spring clamp jammed beside the bus bar rather than over the bus bar. The system had been operating for six months and had finally through many on-off current cycles, started weakening the elecrical contact and produced the problems identified.
Replacing the circuit breaker stabilized the voltage readings and a new instrument is working fine.
Question #1 is "What caused the fuses to blow(and in the case of the second instrument, damage the circuitry)?" and question #2 is "How did the DMM see a voltage reading of 142.2 V with a poor connection to a nominal 120 V source?.
Thanks for your help!
Suspecting a shorting to another phase, I reviewed the supply wiring, and confirmed their was no shorting. What I found was the 20 amp circuit breaker in the distribution panel had been forceably installed with the spring clamp jammed beside the bus bar rather than over the bus bar. The system had been operating for six months and had finally through many on-off current cycles, started weakening the elecrical contact and produced the problems identified.
Replacing the circuit breaker stabilized the voltage readings and a new instrument is working fine.
Question #1 is "What caused the fuses to blow(and in the case of the second instrument, damage the circuitry)?" and question #2 is "How did the DMM see a voltage reading of 142.2 V with a poor connection to a nominal 120 V source?.
Thanks for your help!