leonhart88
Electrical
- Jan 2, 2011
- 14
Hi,
I have a general "best practice" question about grounding of large instrumentation. In the past, when I've built enclosures or sub-systems out of 8020 and aluminum or powder coated steel panels, I've always attempted to ground all panels & metal parts (eg. using PEMs on the steel panels, and biting washers on the 8020 extrusions with grounding wires).
You can imagine that for a large instrument, this can start to become a ton of work with lots of little tooth washers and nuts, etc. One can also imagine that various parts of the instrument will never have high voltage components inside of it and that the high voltage components can be isolated into one section of the instrument.
In said system, there's one inlet connector for 120V AC going into a AC/DC power supply and then low voltage DC (24-48V) is broken out to various sensors & actuators inside.
My question is, is it best practice to ground every single metal item in this instrument? Or is it adequate to simply limit the area in which the live AC wires could touch during a fault and only ground that subsection? For example, if the AC wiring is confined to a small sub-section of the 8020, is it adequate to just ground the extrusion & panels around that area? Alternatively, if the AC wiring enters an enclosed box (like a junction box) immediately and the AC/DC converter is located inside of said box, with only 24-48V DC exiting the box, do any external panels need to be grounded at all?
Note that I'm just curious about this as a best practice, however if there are applicable standards for general instrumentation, I would be interested to know details on those as well.
Thanks everyone!
I have a general "best practice" question about grounding of large instrumentation. In the past, when I've built enclosures or sub-systems out of 8020 and aluminum or powder coated steel panels, I've always attempted to ground all panels & metal parts (eg. using PEMs on the steel panels, and biting washers on the 8020 extrusions with grounding wires).
You can imagine that for a large instrument, this can start to become a ton of work with lots of little tooth washers and nuts, etc. One can also imagine that various parts of the instrument will never have high voltage components inside of it and that the high voltage components can be isolated into one section of the instrument.
In said system, there's one inlet connector for 120V AC going into a AC/DC power supply and then low voltage DC (24-48V) is broken out to various sensors & actuators inside.
My question is, is it best practice to ground every single metal item in this instrument? Or is it adequate to simply limit the area in which the live AC wires could touch during a fault and only ground that subsection? For example, if the AC wiring is confined to a small sub-section of the 8020, is it adequate to just ground the extrusion & panels around that area? Alternatively, if the AC wiring enters an enclosed box (like a junction box) immediately and the AC/DC converter is located inside of said box, with only 24-48V DC exiting the box, do any external panels need to be grounded at all?
Note that I'm just curious about this as a best practice, however if there are applicable standards for general instrumentation, I would be interested to know details on those as well.
Thanks everyone!