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Many ships have ungrounded systems, with ground fault monitoring. Single
phase panels are used (without the neutral bus), or three phase panels (120 volt delta). All circuits use 2 pole breakers. Common ground monitor is lights from phase to ground, if the light is out the phase is grounded. Pete Albright, Tampa, FL "Larry W4CSC" wrote in message ... On Sat, 27 Dec 2003 18:15:16 GMT, Larry wrote: Being totally unfamiliar with naval systems, the question Rob asked still remains: Is the neutral (in a 60 - 0 - 60 system) connected to one of the 60 volt legs? Is it still coded white? I'm assuming that ground is always connected to frame or earth ground in any system. I'm sorry but I really don't remember. The last ship I was on with this was USS Everglades (AD-24) completed in 1952. I was on her from 1966-1969 and I'm WAY too old to remember details back THAT far, now.... But, as I remember doing some wiring in our calibration lab, I don't think there was a "neutral" in that system. The 120VAC was from one wire to another and I don't think the center tap of it was connected to anything but ship's ground, as we didn't use the 60VAC for anything to that center tap. |
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