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Branch Circuit Testing © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 1 of 56 Branch Circuit Testing • Why test branch circuits • Causes of branch circuit failures • Emerging Technologies • General Tests methods • Type of Testers. © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 2 of 56 Why Test Branch Circuits? Safety Issues • Electrocution • Equipment failure • Fire caused by Electrical circuits – Branch Circuits with or without AFCI protection © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 3 of 56 Electrical Shock Every week someone is killed by Electrocution through installed home wiring. • 490 people lost their life from Electrocution in 1997* from: – Consumer products – 24% – Large appliances - 16% – Installed home wiring - 12% *NFPA and US Consumer Product Safety Commission 1997 data © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 4 of 56 Causes of Electrical Shock Defective protection devices like TVSS, and GFCI • There have been several changes to UL943 Requirement for GFCI’s due to studies over several years of older units not operating properly. • Effective January 2003 • www.ul.com/media/newsrel/nr072302 – Defective wiring, Neutral to Ground bonds. – Poor Ground conductor circuit – Poor Earth Ground © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 5 of 56 Equipment Failures Failures result in: • • • • • Erratic operation Lost productivity Lost/corrupt data Damaged equipment Poor power efficiency © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 6 of 56 Fires NFPA and US Consumer Product Safety Commission 1997 data showed – 406,000 residential structural fires • Residential fires accounted for 74% of all structure fires – 3,390 civilian deaths and 17,775 injuries • Residential fires resulted in 97% of all deaths and 87% of injuries – 9% of all structural fires and 7% of deaths were a result of failures within the electrical distribution system www.cpsc.gov/library/fire97.pdf © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 7 of 56 Estimated Fire losses Electrical Distribution Fires Injuries Deaths Installed Wiring 14,600 420 110 Cord, Plug 6,300 320 90 Switch, Outlet 4,900 160 10 Lamp, light Fix. 9,900 350 30 Other 4,600 10 10 Total 40,300 1360 250 *NFPA and US Consumer Product Safety Commission 1997 data © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 8 of 56 Estimated Fire losses • According to a recent report by the National Association of State Fire Marshals, during the period from 1994-1998, there was an average of over 70,000 total electrical fires, which were responsible for over 500 deaths • Of these 70,000 electrical fires, 60,000 were caused by arcing, not from an overloaded or short circuit "AFCI Inquiry and Report" by the Consumer Product Safety Task Force of the National Association of State Fire Marshals, August 1, 2002. © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 9 of 56 Causes of Electrical Fires • Series Arcing Faults: can be Defined as a partial or total conductor or path in series with the load that alternates between infinite resistance to high resistance or normal. – Since the arc condition is in series with the load, the arc current cannot exceed the loads current. – Series arcs may contribute to insulation degradation that might lead to parallel arc conditions. • Example would be a break in the conductor which has carbonized or has intermittent contact. Arc-fault Circuit Interrupters--A Critical NEC 2005 Issue / High Resistance Series Fault 4 Brendan Foley, Joseph Engel, and Clive Kimblin. © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 10 of 56 Causes of Electrical Fires • Parallel Arcing Faults, occur as a short circuit or a ground fault. – A short circuit arc decreases the dielectric strength of insulation separating the conductors, allowing a high-impedance, lowcurrent arc fault to develop, that carbonizes the conductor's insulation, further decreasing the dielectric of the insulation separating the conductors. – The result is increased current, exponentially increased thermal energy, and the likelihood of a fire. The current flow in a short circuit, parallel arc fault is limited by the system impedance and the impedance of the arc fault itself. Not necessarily the breakers rating. The Basics of Arc-Fault Protection by Mike Holt, Mike Holt Enterprises, Inc. | Apr 01 '02 EC&M © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 11 of 56 Causes of Electrical Fires • High Resistance Fault: is a series fault characterized by the presence of abnormally high resistance, compared to a normal wire, wire termination, or wire splice, resulting in a reduction of capacity and heat dissipation at the fault. – These high resistance series faults result from a build-up of copper or aluminum oxide that creates a high resistance, "glowing contact.“ – This high-resistance point can become extremely hot with temperatures exceeding 600° F causing insulation failure, that can result in a damaging high-power parallel arcing fault or ground fault. – Glowing contacts can develop at virtually any electrical connection conducting current. The current in the high resistance fault, like the series arcing fault, is limited to the current being drawn by the load— until the insulation degrades to the point where this type of fault becomes a parallel arcing fault or causes leakage current to ground. Arc-fault Circuit Interrupters--A Critical NEC 2005 Issue / High Resistance Series Fault 4 Brendan Foley, Joseph Engel, and Clive Kimblin. © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 12 of 56 Causes of Electrical Fires • Summary, Series or High Resistance Arc Faults: are the results of defects in the wiring as part of a conductor or connection that is in series with the load Since the arc condition is in series with the load the arc current cannot exceed the Loads current. – Glowing contacts in copper or aluminum wiring – High resistance in Back-wired devices like receptacles – Loose or corroded connections – Bad splices – Hot plugs, or high resistance contact between outlet to plug. © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 13 of 56 New Technology • AFCI breakers were adopted in the NEC 210.12 defined as a device to provide protection from an ARCing Fault. • UL 1699 Defines the requirements for these devices, but the most common and commercially available is the Branch/Feeder or B/F type. – In there are discussion that for 2008 a combination AFCI breaker will be adopted. This breaker would sense both Series and Parallel faults. © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 14 of 56 New Technology • AFCI B/F breakers sense common load current and adds protections from parallel arcing faults and Ground faults • UL and EIA determined that protection from a Series arc that included arcing to ground be at least 5 amps • They also reported that the lowest short circuit current lineneutral in the US to bewithin 75 amps at a receptacle. © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing All currently available AFCIs will detect line-to-ground arcs at 50mA or above 15 of 56 New Technology UL 1699 defined six devices, but three major types of AFCI's for branch circuits, Branch/Feeder, Outlet Circuit, and Combination devices. The Branch/Feeder type is the most common and the only device at this time that satisfies the current NEC requirements. • What does a Branch/Feeder AFCI do. – Over current protection: This is the normal function of a breaker. To trip when the load current has exceed the current rating of the breaker. – Hazardous Arcing: An AFCI will trip when it senses a characteristic arcing between line and neutral above 75 amperes. – Ground Faults: The standard requirement for an AFCI is to trip on a line to ground fault of 5 amperes or greater. Most AFCI will trip between 30mA to 50mA. – Neutral to Ground Faults: If the neutral conductor comes in contact with a grounded circuit the AFCI will trip. © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 16 of 56 New Technology Table of ARC Detection and Protection Capability From A Branch Feeder AFCI Arc Condition Branch/Feeder type Line-to-Neutral Yes- 75 A Line-ground Series with ground Series without gnd Yes- 50 mA Yes - 5 A no * Part of Table 1 from The Truth About AFCIs (Part 1) © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 17 of 56 Testing of the Branch Circuit • General Testers cannot identify High Resistance or Series faults nor can they identify a Neutral to ground bond – Glowing contacts in copper or aluminum wiring – High resistance in Back-wired devices like receptacle – Loose or corroded connections – Bad splices – Hot plugs, or high resistance contact between outlet to plug. © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing A high resistance connection, can result in hot spots or Glowing connections which can breakdown in insulation and poor efficiency of the electrical system 18 of 56 Testing of the Branch Circuit • Nor can a General Tester identify a “False” or “bootleg” ground – Defined as an accidental short or improper bonding of ground to neutral conductors – Shows up as normally wired condition with general receptacle testers – Sensed by the new AFCI breakers, Conditions will trip an AFCI at turn on. • At times may be very difficult to locate. © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 19 of 56 Testing of the Branch Circuit • Before the adoption of the AFCI Circuit breaker, Many of the same wiring faults existed and still exist today in standard branch circuits, – BUT DO WE TEST FOR THEM ON NON-AFCI CIRCUITS? • AFCI’s have helped minimize wiring or load defects in the branch circuits with which they are associated, but it doesn’t address all circuits. • Series faults are not covered by the present AFCI technology. • Is there a way to Identify many of the problems found in branch circuits today? © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 20 of 56 Testing of the Branch Circuit Using Voltage Drop NEC code Articles {210-19(a) FPN No. 4} {215-2(d) FPN No. 2} - “Branch circuit conductors should be sized so as not to exceed a maximum voltage drop of 3% at the farthest outlet , and that the combined voltage drop for both a branch and feeder should not exceed 5%” • • Measure the voltage drop at the furthest receptacle from the panel Low voltage drop indicates a low impedance system – Lowers the risk of hidden hazards – Improves power efficiency and operation © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 21 of 56 Testing of the Branch Circuit Testing under a load and calculating voltage drop can identify common wiring problems – Undersized wiring for load or length of run • NEC 210-19(a) FPN no.4 states that conductors be sized to provide reasonable efficiency of equipment operation – High resistance connections • Loose or corroded connections • Poor splices • Defective devices • Voltage drop can detect an estimated 90% of defects on a branch circuit © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 22 of 56 Testing of the Branch Circuit • Lets do a little Experiment to test this out. I have a circuit with a receptacle at the end of 60 feet of wire – With no-load is the voltage the same on DMM A and DMM B? – Note reading – With a load attached to the circuit is the Voltage the same on DMM A and DMM B ? – Note reading • Calculate Voltage drop © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Voltage Drop = V (no-load) – V (load) % Voltage Drop = Voltage Drop/ V (no-load) Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 23 of 56 Testing of the Branch Circuit We all remember the Old Way • A hair-dryer or drill worked well as a load for this test • We Measured the line voltage with no-load and then with load and recorded the reading • If a circuit was already under a load the additional 10-12 amp load would trip the breaker © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 24 of 56 Testing of the Branch Circuit Using Modern Technology • A Device like the IDEAL SureTest circuit analyzer places a load on the line and Calculates the 12, 15, and 20 ampere voltage drop. – One method to Identifying High resistance circuit faults • Patented technology pulses the load on the line without tripping circuit breakers or interrupting existing equipment © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 25 of 56 Testing of the Branch Circuit Calculating Voltage Drop • VD = I x R – I = Current = 16 Amperes – R = Resistance of conductors = .4 Ohms • 2 Ohms/1000 feet for 12 gauge (Chapter 9, Table 8) • 2 Conductors of 100 ft = 200 Feet • (2/1000) x 200 = 0.4 Ohms • VD = 16 A x 0.4 = 6.4 Volts • VD% = 6.4/120 = .05333 or 5.3 © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 26 of 56 Testing of the Branch Circuit • Using this method not only helps us determine the integrity of the circuit, it also gives additional information, not just the resistance of the conductors, but of the entire circuit. © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 27 of 56 Testing of the Branch Circuit Finding the Cause of High Impedance • Measure the voltage drop at the furthest receptacle from the panel and record the reading • Repeat this at each receptacle until you find a significant decrease in voltage drop from one receptacle to the next – At that point check the circuit and wiring leading to the last receptacle. • Check voltage drop on remaining receptacles – If voltage drop is acceptable in remaining receptacles, then the problem is probably localized at the receptacle connection – If voltage drop is unacceptable, then the problem exists within the hot or neutral conductors © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 28 of 56 Testing of the Branch Circuit Finding the Cause of High Impedance If all devices have high voltage drop then the high impedance is caused by: – Undersized wire for length of run – Splice between the panel and the first device – Poor connections or corroded contacts at panel, breaker, neutral bus, etc. © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 29 of 56 Testing of the Branch Circuit Finding the Cause of High Impedance In this example there is a poor connection between Device 2 and 3 which did not show up with a DMM reading. Under a load test the voltage drop on device 3 and 4 was 12%. The voltage drop at device 2 decreased to 8%. © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 30 of 56 Testing of the Branch Circuit • SureTest also shows correct wiring including Identifying Neutral to ground contact faults to within 15’ of the fault and 15’ from the panel. • Conductor impedance of Hot, Neutral and ground • N-G Voltage • GFCI With time to trip • ARCI Fault testing © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 31 of 56 Testing of the Branch Circuit Finding Hot Spots • Most poor panel connections show up as hot spots in the panel – Test quickly with an infrared temperature meter • Voltage drop across contact point, such as a breaker should not exceed 10mV to 100mV. This is also true for switch contacts. – Check contact points and breaker © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 32 of 56 Testing of the Branch Circuit Importance of the Ground wire Three major reasons for ground • To provide Zero reference for the electrical service • Provide a low resistance path to protect from electrical faults • Protect equipment against static electricity and protect against frame potential for the operator’s safety © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 33 of 56 Testing of the Branch Circuit Common Faults with the Ground wire • High impedance grounds – Rule of thumb < 1 Ohm – Electronic equipment and data networks require very low impedance • IEEE recommends < 0.25 Ohms • False Grounds • Undersized ground conductor, corroded or loose contacts – If circuit conductors are increased in size to accommodate voltage drop the ground should also be sized accordingly (NEC –122(b) The SureTest Patient Technology can test the Impedance The ground wire and also Identify false or N-G faults © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 34 of 56 Installation of Safety Devices • Ground Fault Circuit Interrupters – NEC requires installation of GFCI in bathroom, kitchens and outside. – Purpose is to protect individuals by detecting ground faults. – Defective or improperly installed GFCI can lead to shock. © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com SureTest family have GFCI testing, some provide in the test Current and time to trip information Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 35 of 56 Ground Electrode • NEC Code 250-56 requires a single ground electrode to have 25 Ohms or less resistance, and if not, be augmented by one additional rod spaced at least 6’ apart of any type specified in section 250-50 or 250-52 • This measurement can be taken with a three point earth resistance tester or a ground resistance clamp meter © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 36 of 56 Integrity of the Branch Circuit Causes of AFCI Tripping at turn on • Over-current. For any current above its current rating it will trip according to its circuit breaker time-current characteristic. • Hazardous arcing. For arcing at current levels of about 75 amperes and above, the AFCI will trip. Commercially available AFCIs will actually operate at some level below 75 amperes. The AFCI will operate faster than a fuse or circuit breaker under shortcircuit over-current conditions up to about 125 amperes. • Arcing ground faults. The standard requires tripping on faults of 5 amperes and greater. Commercial units will actually detect ground faults of 50 milli-amperes and greater. Tripping will be instantaneous, with no intentional delay. © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 37 of 56 Integrity of the Branch Circuit Shared Neutral in residential wiring t Shared Neutrals is a practice where one three wire conductor is used as a homerun for two singlephase circuits. © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 38 of 56 Integrity of the Branch Circuit Causes of Tripping at breaker turn on or with load • Neutral grounding. If the neutral conductor (grounded-circuit conductor) of an AFCI protected circuit touches the ground wire or grounded metal, the AFCI will trip, if the impedance to ground is very low impedance. • Abnormal environments. Some abnormal events may also cause tripping, such as high voltage surges from lightning or utility line surges, voltage or frequency fluctuations from poorly regulated backup generators, or mechanical shock. © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 39 of 56 Integrity of the Branch Circuit Finding the Causes for the Trip • If after Energized, an AFCI circuit immediately trips, what steps should be taken? • Well , a lot of approaches have been suggested , but an orderly search or approach will help reduce the stress. • Remember that AFCI’s have two primary Functions – Over-Current sensing – Arc Fault condition • One of the most common faults is found to be a * Neutral to ground contact fault or false ground. * The SureTest Patient Technology can test the Impedance of the ground wire and also Identify false or N-G faults © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 40 of 56 Integrity of the Branch Circuit Finding the Causes for the Trip • The AFCI will sense an arc that occurs because of Insulation or isolation break-down, which can be tested with an insulation tester – Disconnect all loads and verify that unconnected wire ends are insulated. – Disconnect the load wire to the AFCI, or GFCI in the circuit. Use the Megger to apply a direct voltage starting with 250 then 500. • It is always best to start with a voltage that is 2X the rating of the source and increase if necessary • A rule of thumb is, roughly 1 megohms per 1000V, but it is always best to consult with the wire manufacturers for best results. © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 41 of 56 Integrity of the Branch Circuit Finding the Causes for the Trip • If the trip is not Instantaneous, it would indicate an overload trip • Energize the circuit and measure the load current over time. A clamp meter should be able to determine this. – A DMM with CT that has a fast Peak hold function, may also be useful in Identifying between Over-Current and Arcing. – Disconnect load and reinstall to Identify the defective device. Finding the Causes for the Trip © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 42 of 56 Integrity of the Branch Circuit Finding the Causes for the Trip • If the trip is Instantaneous, it could indicate Ground Faults or earth leakage. • Ground faults are small amounts of current that “leak” over to ground caused by deteriorating insulation or moisture. – A Low amperage current clamp or clamp meter, with a low range having the ability to measure 5-10 mA accurately, could help. • The GFCI or AFIC measure the difference between current out and current in. If there is an imbalance, it will trip. • Disconnect load and reinstall to Identify the defective device. © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 43 of 56 Branch Circuit Testing Protect personnel and equipment by: • Verify that electrical devices have been wired up correctly • Maintain a low impedance electrical system • Maintain a good electrical ground © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 44 of 56 Branch Circuit Testing Use certified devices and testing equipment • Not all Testers are what they seem to be! • Branch circuit testing should – Verify proper wiring – Measure the integrity of the branch circuit – Measure the integrity of the ground conductor • Measure the integrity of the ground electrode • Install and test the operation of safety devices © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 45 of 56 Branch Circuit Testing • Certification labs test devices and equipment for failure under extreme conditions to protect consumers • With “Free trade and open markets” there has been an surge of counterfeited certifications • UL provides information on their web site © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com www.ul.com/retail/certified.html Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 46 of 56 Receptacle Testers • Check to ensure that devices have been wired up correctly immediately after installation – – – – Proper wiring of receptacle Correct voltage level Good continuity on switches Warn against faulty wiring in 3-wire receptacles • Test GFCI receptacles for proper operation © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 47 of 56 Branch Circuit Testing • To test a GFCI, an imbalance needs to be placed between hot and neutral • The the amount of imbalance and time to trip should be monitored to verify GFCI performance • Many receptacle testers will test GFCI receptacles • The Ideal 61-058 will not only test GFCI but will also test the AFCI Breaker © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 48 of 56 Circuit Identifiers • Identify circuit breakers and fuses without service interruption • Automatic or adjustable sensitivity levels • Visual and audible indication © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com 61-532 model has an Analog Receiver 61-534 has Digital Receiver w/ NCV, High voltage transmitter with GFCI Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 49 of 56 Voltage/Continuity Testers • Test from ranges of 6600V volts AC or DC • Some units vibrate to provide tactile indication of voltage level • Audible continuity © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 50 of 56 Branch Circuit Testing • To test a AFCI you need to generate a number of high current pulses to simulate the effect of an arc condition that may exist in wiring or cords, • IDEAL has Two Testers which can simulate an arc • They Are the; – 61-058 GFCI/AFCI testers – 61-165 Circuit Analyzer with AFCI and GFCI © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 51 of 56 SureTest Circuit Analyzer • Measures integrity of a branch circuit – Voltage drop under an actual 12, 15, 20 Amp load • Measures Conductor and ground impedance • Wiring and Identifies false grounds • GFCI • AFCI • Some models not shown Measure harmonic distortion © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 61-164 SureTest Circuit Analyzer 61-165 SureTest Circuit Analyzer with AFCI 52 of 56 Infrared Temperature Meter • Checks for hot spots in breakers and panels • Laser point sighting to target device under test • 15 to 1 angle of view ability – 15 inches from panel will measure temperature across 1 inch circle © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 53 of 56 Earth Testers • Ideal/Megger 61-788 – 3 pole Testers • IDEAL/Megger 61-789 – 4 pole Testers – Self powered - no need for hand crank – Low power consumption Compact and lightweight – Quick battery check – Limited lifetime warranty © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 54 of 56 Earth Testers • Ideal 61-920 Ground Resistance Clamp – – – – – – Ground Resistance Ground Leakage Current Auto ranging Audible indication < 40 ohms Open jaw indication Data hold © 2007 Ideal Industries www.idealindustries.com Basics of Branch Circuit Testing 55 of 56