allamateur
DIY
I have a box powering three 3-phase motors off of one 240V single phase line, NEMA 10-30. In the picture you can see a wiring diagram. The original wiring I had was one box containing all those components. It would cause over-current errors on the right-side (1 HP) VFD when I didn't have fuses installed, and when they were installed it would always pop them as soon as the box was hooked up to the NEMA 10-30 plug.
I have a suspicion that the reason is a ground loop or something similar but I can't see any such loop in the diagram. The common ground is attached to the enclosure box itself.
What's going wrong in this design, and how can I determine that and test it to be sure?
Not being able to see a loop, I decided to add line reactors because they are sometimes recommended to prevent VFDs in parallel from sending each other interference. I also added a MCCB and contactor with control switch so I would have a master on/off at the box. The new components are in a separate box. Does the new design have a ground loop as well? There is an intentionally placed loop in the middle because I am using 10/3 wire and the first box has 2 of those wires going to the 2nd box. If I connect both white/neutrals from the 2 cables to the common ground in the 2nd box, I'll have that loop. If I only connect one, I shouldn't have that. This is a separate question to the main "what's going wrong in the first design?" but does this trivial loop matter?
Thanks.
I have a suspicion that the reason is a ground loop or something similar but I can't see any such loop in the diagram. The common ground is attached to the enclosure box itself.
What's going wrong in this design, and how can I determine that and test it to be sure?
Not being able to see a loop, I decided to add line reactors because they are sometimes recommended to prevent VFDs in parallel from sending each other interference. I also added a MCCB and contactor with control switch so I would have a master on/off at the box. The new components are in a separate box. Does the new design have a ground loop as well? There is an intentionally placed loop in the middle because I am using 10/3 wire and the first box has 2 of those wires going to the 2nd box. If I connect both white/neutrals from the 2 cables to the common ground in the 2nd box, I'll have that loop. If I only connect one, I shouldn't have that. This is a separate question to the main "what's going wrong in the first design?" but does this trivial loop matter?
Thanks.