jedijunk
Electrical
- May 6, 2006
- 6
I work in Cambodia and have a question about isolation transformers and what one would do in my situation. Some people may also weigh in on local grounding, which past experience tells me could get entertaining. ;-)
The Setting
Here in Cambodia, we have an ungrounded power distribution system. A 210v hot wire and a neutral wire are provided to the building, and almost all buildings only use 2-wire runs internally, with no local ground or ground bonded to neutral.
So I decided to rewire my house with 3-wire and install a local grounding rod/spike so I could have a ground wire (for safety and because I use sound equipment that needs a ground). It seemed like a great idea in theory, but...
The Problem
When I measure from hot to neutral I get somewhere between 210 volts and 195 volts as I always have (depending on the time of day and the neighborhood load). That's not ideal but I can live with it. BUT now when I measure from the neutral to my new local ground I get anywhere from 10 volts up to 55 volts (yikes!). Measuring from the hot wire to the local ground shows a corresponding voltage reduction (so if neutral to ground is 40 volts, hot to ground is around 170 volts).
So basically the supply neutral wire is nowhere near neutral, and its voltage is in a different phase/direction than the hot wire. It's almost like the hot wire is a strong phase and the "neutral" wire is a weak phase, and the voltage distance between the two gives me my target voltage of around 210 volts. The fact that the distance between the two adds up to 210v makes me suspect that the power company knows about this and is controlling it somehow, but complaining about the supply voltage will get me nowhere and there's not much chance I could even get any info out of them about this!
The Question
So here's my question. Let's say I could find and install a 1:1 isolation transformer big enough to power my whole house (I don't think it matters to the question but I draw 16-20amps at 210v). Given an input voltage of 170v hot and 40v (in the opposite direction) on the neutral, would the isolation transformer's output be: a) 210v hot leg and a 0v neutral (this is what I'm hoping for), b) 170v hot (or whatever voltage the supply hot to local ground is) and 0v neutral, or c) would the voltage on neutral carry through the isolation transformer, giving me the same problem of 170v hot and 40v neutral? Things you purchase here in Cambodia are non-returnable, so I want to have an informed hope of success before I try to find and purchase a big isolation transformer.
Thanks in advance for any insight or advice you can offer!
The Setting
Here in Cambodia, we have an ungrounded power distribution system. A 210v hot wire and a neutral wire are provided to the building, and almost all buildings only use 2-wire runs internally, with no local ground or ground bonded to neutral.
So I decided to rewire my house with 3-wire and install a local grounding rod/spike so I could have a ground wire (for safety and because I use sound equipment that needs a ground). It seemed like a great idea in theory, but...
The Problem
When I measure from hot to neutral I get somewhere between 210 volts and 195 volts as I always have (depending on the time of day and the neighborhood load). That's not ideal but I can live with it. BUT now when I measure from the neutral to my new local ground I get anywhere from 10 volts up to 55 volts (yikes!). Measuring from the hot wire to the local ground shows a corresponding voltage reduction (so if neutral to ground is 40 volts, hot to ground is around 170 volts).
So basically the supply neutral wire is nowhere near neutral, and its voltage is in a different phase/direction than the hot wire. It's almost like the hot wire is a strong phase and the "neutral" wire is a weak phase, and the voltage distance between the two gives me my target voltage of around 210 volts. The fact that the distance between the two adds up to 210v makes me suspect that the power company knows about this and is controlling it somehow, but complaining about the supply voltage will get me nowhere and there's not much chance I could even get any info out of them about this!
The Question
So here's my question. Let's say I could find and install a 1:1 isolation transformer big enough to power my whole house (I don't think it matters to the question but I draw 16-20amps at 210v). Given an input voltage of 170v hot and 40v (in the opposite direction) on the neutral, would the isolation transformer's output be: a) 210v hot leg and a 0v neutral (this is what I'm hoping for), b) 170v hot (or whatever voltage the supply hot to local ground is) and 0v neutral, or c) would the voltage on neutral carry through the isolation transformer, giving me the same problem of 170v hot and 40v neutral? Things you purchase here in Cambodia are non-returnable, so I want to have an informed hope of success before I try to find and purchase a big isolation transformer.
Thanks in advance for any insight or advice you can offer!