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padmount dist xfmrs & lightning

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Jay27

Electrical
Nov 20, 2009
11
We know the cause was lightning, I just want to understand why...

Single phase underground line with a lightning arrestor and line fuse at the TP pole (terminal pole - where the line goes from OH to UG). The line has 15 or so padmount transformers on it, serving 20 or so customers. All tubs are 120/240V, 15 - 25 kVA. The last tub on the line also has a lightning arrestor; the line ends at this tub. All the transformers have 2 ground rods - one in the basement, driven 7.5' and one 6' in-front of the tub (for step-potential).

We had a bit of a storm... got 4"+ of rain and lots of lightning. We suspect lightning struck the ground (as in the physical Earth) in the vacinity. Of the 15 transformers, 9 had blown bay-o-net fuses. The line fuse did not blow, both arrestors were good. All of the transformers held when re-fused. I assume, the lightning strike to the ground caused a rise in ground potential, question is: how did this result in the transformer bay-o-nets blowing? All tubs are fed in-and-out. De-energizing a single tub (pulling elbow) does not de-energize tubs further down the line. The tubs with blown fuses were not in series... it would skip 1 or 2, hit 3, skip 1, hit 2, etc. It is possible the conductor is bare-concentric (I'm not sure if that contributes).

you can't fix stupid
 
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Its possible that the ground potential rise in the middle of the string of transformers caused internal flashover inside the transformer, initiating a power fault which the fuses interrupted. Proper fuse coordination would result in the transformer fuses blowing before the line fuse. Although multiple parallel faults could sum up to a high enough current at the pole fuse to take that one out first under other conditions.

All tubs are fed in-and-out. De-energizing a single tub (pulling elbow) does not de-energize tubs further down the line.

Hmm. Tub in this context being the handhole upon which the padmount sits? I've not heard this jargon before. For feed-through padmounts, pulling one elbow will de-energize all downstream units. However, if the 'tub' contains a 3 way 'junction box', its is possible to pull the one elbow feeding that unit without affecting downstream transformers.
 
Another possibility is that the potential rise caused the windings to saturate and the primary current increased enough to blow the fuses.
 
@PHovnanian
'tub' is the slang we use for just about any transformer. ;) All our transformers are feed-thru... It's probably just how we spec them.

@jghrist
I like the over-excitation theory in terms of an explanation

you can't fix stupid
 
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