foolish
New member
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- Location
- Fairbanks, Alaska
Greetings. I've been reworking a MEP-804A going from a low WYE three-phase into a zig zag 120/240 single phase conversion using the instructions for the MEP-004 conversion. Primarily using this for a completely off grid house power system for charging up my batteries during the long, dark winter months when solar doesn't cut it completely to keep everything charged up.
I managed to get a good signal to my house inverter/charger unit to the point where it would qualify the signal and charge (so good frequency and voltage when I was watching the real-time information). Only ran for about 45 seconds but after checking all the connections afterward noticed that one of the wires coming off the TB1 was hot to the touch. Reverted back to the 3-phase configuration and verified the issue wasn't there and got some diagnotics I needed for a couple of meter/monitor wires that needed to shift. After re-enabling the single phase conversion I cranked up the generator again and ran another minute. This time I did not enable the circuit or load and was able to track that the hot (!) wire was specifically going to terminal 10 on TB1. None of the other wires on TB1 were even warm.
I've got five monitor/meter wires that were connected to the backside of TB1 that are currently disconnected as I was trying to get voltages for shifts to a new appropriate terminals for the zig zag configuration. I was hoping they would line up with some of the meters noted for moves in the mep-004 conversion but no luck. The heating issue occurred even when these wires were hooked to temporary locations I originally traced as likely candidates to provide the correct feedback that would need to be tracked.
Any thoughts on why only the 10 wire (and only this one) would be getting extremely hot? Thanks...
I managed to get a good signal to my house inverter/charger unit to the point where it would qualify the signal and charge (so good frequency and voltage when I was watching the real-time information). Only ran for about 45 seconds but after checking all the connections afterward noticed that one of the wires coming off the TB1 was hot to the touch. Reverted back to the 3-phase configuration and verified the issue wasn't there and got some diagnotics I needed for a couple of meter/monitor wires that needed to shift. After re-enabling the single phase conversion I cranked up the generator again and ran another minute. This time I did not enable the circuit or load and was able to track that the hot (!) wire was specifically going to terminal 10 on TB1. None of the other wires on TB1 were even warm.
I've got five monitor/meter wires that were connected to the backside of TB1 that are currently disconnected as I was trying to get voltages for shifts to a new appropriate terminals for the zig zag configuration. I was hoping they would line up with some of the meters noted for moves in the mep-004 conversion but no luck. The heating issue occurred even when these wires were hooked to temporary locations I originally traced as likely candidates to provide the correct feedback that would need to be tracked.
Any thoughts on why only the 10 wire (and only this one) would be getting extremely hot? Thanks...