Magnetic Field Trouble in Los Angeles: Equipment Failures

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In Los Angeles, a business is experiencing severe equipment failures, potentially linked to a nearby power line creating disruptive magnetic fields. The owner has attempted grounding improvements and is investigating whether current is running through conduits, as well as the impact of a T1 telephone line on their systems. Despite the power company's claims of no issues, the owner is seeking proof of magnetic interference, particularly as their problems have escalated over the past few months. Monitoring equipment is being set up to record potential magnetic field bursts, while suggestions include testing power quality and considering alternative shielding methods. The situation remains critical, with the business facing significant operational challenges.
  • #91
I notice that Russ hasn't been involved in this thread. He's the HVAC specialist; perhaps he's encountered a similar situation in his work.
 
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  • #92
if i were ask to fix a problem like this, i would first determine if possilble, the source of your problem, is its
1. directly from the supply, ie, spikes or dips in the electricity from the power company.

2. is its inducted noice, or power from the near field magnegitc field.

3. is it voltage induced from the electric field.

you can measure magnetic field, with a compass, but you will not pick up transients, like spikes. or you may not pick it up at all.

if you buy a cheap test meter (multimeter) from radio shack, put it on the AC setting, you will read a voltage this is the Electric field indusing a voltage in the test meters leads.

take the meter home, and to work and compare the reading,

shielding and faraday cages will reduce electric and magnetic (electromegnet radiation) interference (induced voltage, current).

i would also try to see if there is any pattern to your outages, do they occur at regular times, ?

you can also purchase equipment that will clean up your supplied power, called "Power Line Filters". these consist of some capacitors and inductors, and are basically a 60hz filter for your power.

you can also purchase, a 1:1 power transformer, you put 115Volts AC in, and you get 115Vac out, but its isolated from the mains supply, and with the large amount of inductance of the transformer its acts like a filter.

yes, you can get harmonics on your power, when there is a spike or dip in your power, its is no longer a pure sine wave, but becomes are square, (with distortion), and harmonics are created,

you should also run power line filters in every piece of equipment as well, they are cheap and are often built into power boards.
 
  • #93
if your T1 line runes the length of the building, its a long antenna and will pick up induced ac from high power lines. and high tension,

is it possible to relocate your server to there your T1 line enteres your building, ??
and put your PABX system at the same location,

can you replace your wired phone and computer network with 802.11g wireless hub, and network. run laptops. and solve your power outage problems that way.. ??
 
  • #94
sorry for the multiple posts, its because i type before i think..

but i was trying to think of way to determine if you are in a strong electromagnetic field. one way is to use a NEON light, they require a high voltage to start but very very low current,

but those novality things you get for your cell phone, that light up when your phone rings, are the same thing, they are neon, that light up in the presence of strong electromagnetic fields.
i have not played with one of them, but i assume if you held one close to a power cable carrying current it would light up as well.

put one on your desk as see if it lights when your lights go out, or phone/computer.
 
  • #95
I was at the building for most of yesterday. I am afraid that there is more going on with the wiring than I thought. I personally helped to track down three problems that we still do not fully understand, but seem to be related to what we think was done by a very bad electrician who tapped legs of wires just because they showed voltage.

One case shows a small window air conditioner in a back wharehouse office being wired with some flourescent lights.

Another case where track lighting in the office shows a 5amp ground loop and some of these office lights are tied to a relay so that all office lights could be shut off at night by a single time clock. There were outlets and who knows what else added to these circuits conrolled by two relays that are powered through a breaker that in turn controls another circuit. These office circuits were known to be at their limit when staff, during the winter months tried to add very small space heaters under the desks and ciurcuits would trip so they had to stop using them.

There are other problems but these were the worst.

I will be very happy if this ends up being our problem but at the same time dissapointed that these problems were not given greater attention and addressed sooner. I am cautiously optimistic because there were events during the middle of the night when no hvac would be cycling and little or no load on any circuit yet breakers had tripped. Could everything in the building be so unstable that normally acceptable levels of emf's would put things over the edge?

We have evidence of fields from very sophisticated equipment and we know those fields fluctuate in intensity and diminish as you move further from the DC line.

Our expert knew we had ground loops based on the evidence from the meters all along but nothing was done about it because we were too busy getting phones and computers isolated from the problems, he was too busy trying to prove out the EMF theory, and I don't think he thought that this ground problem would trip breakers, especially with no load!

This may prove to have been an error in judgement and I should probably have been advised by my expert to bring in more resources/ electricians to address these wiring problems diligently.

The saga continues...
 
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  • #96
Darryl said:
sorry for the multiple posts, its because i type before i think..

but i was trying to think of way to determine if you are in a strong electromagnetic field. one way is to use a NEON light, they require a high voltage to start but very very low current,

but those novality things you get for your cell phone, that light up when your phone rings, are the same thing, they are neon, that light up in the presence of strong electromagnetic fields.
i have not played with one of them, but i assume if you held one close to a power cable carrying current it would light up as well.

put one on your desk as see if it lights when your lights go out, or phone/computer.

What about an oscilloscope? You could leave the probe open-circuit and see how much e-field there is and it's frequency. You could short the probe to ground with a length of wire e.g., 6" and see how much magnetic field there is.

Open circuit, you shouldn't get more than 50mVAC. Short circuited it should less than 1 mVAC. (my experience)

Interference from the DC transmission line would have a frequency of 120 Hz as opposed to that from the AC service in your building which would have a frequency of 60 Hz.
 
  • #97
yes,, your right a CRO, (cathode ray oscilloscpoe) would be able to tell you alot.

it does sound like you have a combinations of problems, each taking your systems to the edge of failure, or over.

poor earthing,
high indused Voltages from the power lines
strong magnetic fields at your location.
possibility of large spiks or dips on your local power system.
possiblity that the high power feeder is inducing power spikes into your local ac power grid ?

i don't know if you are using "earth leakage circuit breakers" on your appliances, do they trip ?

if your getting 5 amps "ground loop" current. is this leakage current, or is your electrician simply reading the current flowing in the Earth side of your power system.

its your electricity power system 3 wire, (like here in australia), we have an
Active
Neutral
Earth

at the power box, there is usually a short circuit link between the Earth and neutral. power to your appliance is supplied between Active and Neutral, with the Earth as a safety,

this means current flows between active and neutral, if any current flows into the earth, its a fault and the Earth leakage breaker will trip.

IF your neutral or Earth line has measuragel AC voltage on it, this means your Earth is not effective, and will also mean your equipment will be at an AC voltage and not and zero volts.

this causes problems with you interfact equipment together over a dispance, (you get Earth current loops flowing), this would (and often does) cause equipment to fail, shutdown, or possibly give small "shocks" if touched.

see if you can divide your businesses power distribution into separate supplies for sensitive equipment, and another supply for higher power, and swited equipment, like AC system, lighting etc.

then on the supply for your computers/phone etc, you can install power line filters, isolation transformers, or a stand alone UPS, or constantly online UPS, so your computers are always powered by the UPS, this will isolate your systems from the power circuits, as much as possible.

reduce long cable runs, if you run a lot of fluro's you might need to consider some Power Factor correction capacitors in your system as well.

Power factor is when the current and voltage of the AC power are not in phase, due to running a lot of inductive loads, (like fluro's). and can cause problems as well.

when trying to solve problems like this, its important (IMO) to sort out what are "effects" and what are "causes". you need to try to focus on and fix the "cuases" of the problem, and not the "effects". otherwise you never really cure the underlying problem.

hopefully you are getting a handle on it, these are certainly a complex issues to resolve,
 
  • #98
business man said:
I was at the building for most of yesterday. I am afraid that there is more going on with the wiring than I thought. I personally helped to track down three problems that we still do not fully understand, but seem to be related to what we think was done by a very bad electrician who tapped legs of wires just because they showed voltage.

You need an inspect and test done ASAP. I assumed the majority of the wiring in your premises was sound given you're a commercial property.

With this new evidence I'd say it is a wiring error. Most likely you're suffering from what we call 'backfeeds' in the UK. It's were two lives from separate circuits are routed back through the same neutral. It causes one breaker to sustain the current of two or more circuits worth of current when everything gets turned on. Given the nature of a lot of your equipment being something that can draw current automatically when needed due to its electronic nature, I'd say this is what's happening.

If he was a really bad electrician then he could have used an Earth as a neutral which would throw GFI/RCD type breakers. It's even possible he could have routed a live into Earth then back out of it again onto another circuit or whatever!

I know how to perform an Inspect & Test and I can give you the details if you like which will enable you to establish correct/incorrect wiring and polarity in your installation if you so wish.

I assume then from this latest information that it's most likely the same circuits which are giving you trouble all the time?

Oh by the way, your phone wire shielding is connected to ground. I'm sure I don't have to tell you how much trouble it would cause your phone lines if someone had made an Earth live by bad wiring which was then routing current through the shielding of your phone line! Hmm..it's all starting to become a bit clearer now!:rolleyes:
 
  • #99
I don't have the energy to write much tonight. Just wanted to let you know I am reading and taking advice as may be appropriate.
Today we had a local university proffesor at the building and he was very perplexed and interested to say the least.
We showed him pictures of the breakers on several panels that randomly tripped and switched to off position at 2:45 A.M. last saturday, which was our latest big event. He thinks it is a field problem but has never seen or heard of anything like it. He may want to turn it over to his graduate students.
Here is another question , if a breaker panel is closed and grounded, how could a magnetic field trip a breaker? The panel must act as a faraday cage right?
There are so many confusing things happening on the various recorded meter readings that I can't remember or understand it all. but the professor was shocked when he saw them.
 
  • #100
This building wasn't constructed on an aboriginal burial ground, was it? :rolleyes:
 
  • #101
burial ground sounds about right.

but i wouls say NO, I've never seen or heard of a breaker tripping by an external magnetic field, whether its inside or outside a metal box.

it might be possible, but i think the magnetic fields from a breaker right next to it would create just as strong an external field.

i think it IS possible the a Electromagnetic field could make high currents flow in a curcuit, and then the breaker trips from overcurrent, its normal mode of tripping.
 
  • #102
business man said:
We showed him pictures of the breakers on several panels that randomly tripped and switched to off position at 2:45 A.M. last saturday, which was our latest big event.

To be honest before you go getting anyone else involved I'd just get a plain old spark (electrician) to come and test out your installation for faulty wiring.

I'll give you an example of just how serious a problem it can cause when something goes wrong with wiring. It concerns the outside lights on our house.

A few years ago we had an extension built by someone we know well. The building work was top notch but the sparks were as bad as anything you can imagine. Recently I pulled out all their garbage and it took me three days to figure out how they'd wired a small four light circuit which was sensor activated and also manually controlled by a switch. This is our home I'm talking about, not a huge industrial premises and the circuit is still a relatively simple one on paper too.

Anyway I removed all their wiring except the parts than ran behind plastered walls which were unreachable. I wired the outside lights off the supply they'd brought in from the board. It ran off the breaker which had 'lights' printed above it in red letters as opposed to the other one which had green letters above it.

Before too long after finishing the install the breaker starts going. This went on for several days. Then I discovered that the 6A red lettered breaker was controlling all the downstairs lights on the house, outside ones included. Its load was now well over 6A and closer to about 8A because the new outside lights are 300W each but also have the utility lights on them which makes for a total current draw of 6A off them alone.

So I thought, the breaker is going. But it's going intermittently? Ah!, thinks me, I know the reason - when not under fault current conditions most breakers and fuses will go a long time on overcurrent before they'll trip. A 6A breaker carrying 8A won't trip straight away. It will take a while.

So I kill off the original supply for the outside lights and run them off a fused radial circuit from the garage socket ring. It's on a 16A breaker with 2.5mm cable. No problem. Or is it?

Next thing I know I'm sitting on my dad's computer just like I am now and it goes:

*POOOOFFF*

Hmm...Clearly still not resolved. But now it's not throwing the red lettered light breaker, it's knocking out EVERYTHING in the house! But with the exception of the upstairs and downstairs lights?

Reason was...given that it was running off the garage socket ring it was now being protected by the RCD or GFI as in the UK it's common practice to have all your socket outlets extra protected by an RCD (or GFI in USA terms) which prevents Earth faults. So at least I now know it's an Earth fault that's doing it. I scratch my head and bingo! A quick look outside reveals the problem.

One of the original power legs coming out above the utility room window which I'd terminated in the box was still connected to a small stub on the other side of the box which was exposed to the rain. And that's what was causing it all.

Are you beginning to see just how big a problem you might have if your building has been wired badly and electronic devices which can turn themselves on are requesting current every now and then? I agree it may not be the entire problem. In fact even if it isn't the problem at all, then you must get it ruled out before you can continue any further or you'll go crazy (trust me).

LOL if you'd pay for the flight and a suitable test meter I'll come over and have a look myself :wink:
 
  • #103
I would seriously consider it if you really think you can solve my problem.
I'll try anything! It is just a matter of prioritizing. I really must get a new FUSED circuit run directly to my phone/computer room without going anywhere near the wall that has panel problems with a emergency generator, good switcher amd conditioner'ups. That alone will be very time consuming and costly, but would be an asset to the company even if we find the real problem later. I would include a few critical circuits for basic lighting and a couple of work stations.
how much is a flight to LAX?
 
  • #104
It would be a fantastic adventure and a wonderful experience, but to be honest I'd be costing you money you don't have to spend as you can get all that stuff done by local electricians without having to pay for a flight or arrange accomodation. Plus obviously it would be a diabolical disappointment to you for me to travel that distance and find out it's something I couldn't anticipate and can't help you with directly!

If you really can't get a local electrician to do the work for you then drop me a pm or a reply in this thread and we'll discuss it further. If it gets to that stage I could do with some photographs of your incoming supply and where you want the cables routing to so I could plan it out in advance.

Then of course there's the problem of me not being able to bring tools on the plane, so you'd have to provide them when I got there, but it wouldn't need anything spectacular to route a fused supply to a few stations and a light circuit. You'd have to accept the odd floorboard might need to come up though:wink:
 
  • #105
business man said:
Today we had a local university proffesor at the building and he was very perplexed and interested to say the least.
We showed him pictures of the breakers on several panels that randomly tripped and switched to off position at 2:45 A.M. last saturday, which was our latest big event. He thinks it is a field problem but has never seen or heard of anything like it.
Curious.
I would think that an EMP would generate opposing currents in a standard cable pair that would cancel out.
Unless there was enough to cause an arc over, in which case the AC power could follow the arc and pop a breaker.
If you were getting that kind of field stength in an event I would think it would tend to destroy cell phones, Ipods and other portable equipment.

Has anyone tried to check for DC currents on your ground point cable or the neutral to the substation?
 
  • #106
Business man, these guys are so far over my head that I have absolutely nothing left to contribute. Suffice it to say that I'll continue to monitor this thread, and you have my sincerest hope that your problem is resolved in a timely manner. :smile:
 
  • #107
Hey business man, since this is such a long thread (but still on-topic), could you please summarize in 10 or so bullets what you have found so far? I've seen some of the highlights (like tripping breakers under some circumstances), but it helps in these debug scenarios if there can be a mid-term summary of the key points to help re-focus the debug. Like, where did grounding make a difference, and where did using a generator make a difference, and what systems are still affected and how often and how, etc.

Can you please summarize were everything is at the moment? Thanks.
 
  • #108
I will try to get my expert to summarize because the stuff he is monitoring is beyond my comprehension and memory.

My attempt at a summary would be the following:
My company is in an 80,000sf section of a 125,000sf bldg, which is a modern, 5 year old, concrete steel reinforced, tilt up style with steel truss/ plywood roof. We are within 75-100ft of a DC transmission line that serves 45% of Los Angeles and within 150ft of an A.C. transmission line.

We have had increasing problems starting from when we moved into the building 1year ago. Previous tenant says he never had problems.
It started, from what I recently heard, from my computer tech saying the hard drive in her office lost memory. She returned it for a new one. This happened four times before she figured out that she couldn’t have a computer in that office. She found out later that the hard drive still had all of her data but only the something, something was erased.

Fast forward to ever increasing phone calls dropping, hard drive crashes in the server room, then finally lights turning off and on, off and on quickly, to the most bizarre finale of circuit breakers not only tripping but actually going to off position with little or no load literally before our eyes and in front of several DWP personnel.

We have had a nationally renowned expert in electrical trouble shooting, working on trying to monitor and pinpoint the problem or problems, but so far has been unsuccessful and does not seem to have any solid clue as to what the cause might be. Not only that but he has never seen or heard of, nor any of his colleagues seen or heard of anything like this.

The DC line has been ramping up over the last several months but we cannot get them to admit that there is consistent correlation between our events and any trouble on their line.
We think the AC line is probably far enough away and most likely not the cause because there are more defined regulations and more history of problems or lack thereof for
AC lines.

We have measured and recorded lots of unusual stuff happening in different parts of the building but I am not able to get that data to you. We have not been able to measure and record the magnetic fields during an event for several reasons like equipment dropping out during event or software not being able to record more than 20 min. at a time etc. Hopefully we can get a recording soon during an event.

We have been limping along with a diesel generator going through an online UPS and line conditioner, bypassing breakers and using only fused disconnect for our phones and computers. Our T1 line is not stable and some of our phone equipment is still failing a couple times a day. We did clean up all of our ground faults, there were about three that totaled maybe 4 or 5 amps to ground and or neutral, now zero.

We had an event at about 6:30 A.M. today that took out several random breakers, never anything bigger than 20amp so far. There were no breaker events the rest of the day but the network went down 2 times along with the phones.

The last few days have been relatively quite compared to about a week ago when we were getting blasted most of the day with lighting off/on, breakers tripping, and phones going down all day, but these lulls have happened before so we need to be prepared for the next round.

I know I am missing a lot and you really need to read the whole progression to get all of the details but maybe this will help.
Adder, have I missed anything critical here? BTW thanks for your help and I hope I can find someone local who is as helpful and caring as you. If you ever do come to the states you better look me up so I can buy you a big steak dinner.
 
  • #109
business man said:
Adder, have I missed anything critical here?

I don't think so mate. Might be worth mentioning your problems got worse when grounding improved.

One thing though, you say nothing over 20Amps has been affected. Does this mean the issue is confined to a set number of breakers consistently?

I need you to get two pieces of very important information for me. They are as follows:

1)Did you say you were still getting problems on the fused circuits which are on the stand alone generator run circuit?

2)Is your building's wiring now up to scratch?

I have had another idea and it is related to your proximity to the power lines and it raises another question:

3)How old are the circuit breakers you currently have installed, and where are they in the building in relation to the points of greatest magnetic disturbance/DC line proximity.

I can't remember exactly how they work but if they're using an electronic amplifier along the same lines as an RCD/GFI does then I suppose it is possible that they have become over-sensitised and are reacting in unusual ways. You need to get this checked out. Is it only confined to breakers rated less than 20Amps?

Hopefully we'll get that Steak dinner :wink:
 
  • #110
Okay, I lied; I have one more idea. The reason that no one else has mentioned it is probably because it's absolutely irrelevant and I don't know what I'm talking about, but here goes anyhow...
This is the first time that you mentioned an AC line being in the same vicinity. Have you tried to correlate the activities of both the DC and AC lines? It just occurred to me that there might be an interaction between them, with you caught in the middle... :redface:
 
  • #111
Adder_Noir said:
I don't think so mate. Might be worth mentioning your problems got worse when grounding improved.

That was when we had a few ground loops that have now been corrected.

One thing though, you say nothing over 20Amps has been affected. Does this mean the issue is confined to a set number of breakers consistently?

No there is no pattern to small breakers tripping. We believe large breakers don't trip because they have stonger springs.

I need you to get two pieces of very important information for me. They are as follows:

1)Did you say you were still getting problems on the fused circuits which are on the stand alone generator run circuit?

No problems at all on fused circuits as long as there is no breaker in the circuit.

2)Is your building's wiring now up to scratch?

Yes! I double checked myself.

I have had another idea and it is related to your proximity to the power lines and it raises another question:

3)How old are the circuit breakers you currently have installed, and where are they in the building in relation to the points of greatest magnetic disturbance/DC line proximity.

The breakers are less than 5 yrs old. The proximity seems to be a possible problem. The 5 or so panels 480v, 120v, 277v, and transformer are all bolted to a steel reinforced concrete wall about 2/3 away from outside wall closest to DC line and about 1/4 the distance from street wall or front of the building nearest the offices.

I can't remember exactly how they work but if they're using an electronic amplifier along the same lines as an RCD/GFI does then I suppose it is possible that they have become over-sensitised and are reacting in unusual ways. You need to get this checked out. Is it only confined to breakers rated less than 20Amps?

Yes, but we did see evidence of the main digital breaker at the service panel in the back start to trip but never actually did. We replaced it with a dumber breaker and it has not been a problem since.
Also no vertically oriented breaker has tripped maybe because those are all heavier sprung.



Hopefully we'll get that Steak dinner :wink:

oh yea:approve:

With regard to proximity of issues, There are 2 single story concrete shear walls embeded within the office. BTW shear walls should be footings to truss roof to be effective.
We seem to have the highest field readings above those walls at the second story level. This would be the old server room/current phone room and the other one being where my computer tech said she could not keep her hard drive from crashing so she moved all computer work out of that location many months ago, see my last post.
 
  • #112
business man said:
Fast forward to ever increasing phone calls dropping, hard drive crashes in the server room, then finally lights turning off and on, off and on quickly, to the most bizarre finale of circuit breakers not only tripping but actually going to off position with little or no load literally before our eyes and in front of several DWP personnel.

Just curious but when you say no load does that mean no assumed load i.e. with all appliances turned off or are they actually tripping when no current is measured flowing through them?

I hope it's not the first signs of the Earth's magnetic field reversing :-p Apparently it happens every x no. of thousand years and we'll be utterly screwed when it does it again! :smile:

Hmm... another thought enters the mind. It appears it's a quite a good one too. It's almost as good as Danger's suggestion about being between two magnetic fields (which I'd suggest to the power company), so here goes:

I wonder if it might be possible that part of your building is not connected to earth. This is entirely possible if the installation electrician was not too clued up and what should go where to put it as politely as possible, especially given that you've had to fix several ground faults of his.

So is it possible that two large parts of your building which are made of metal and say running parallel to each other are being charged up by the nearby power lines. Over time they will act like a large capacitor if they are both isolated from each other and ground.

Perhaps your events are being caused by things occasionally making contact with them and causing them to discharge like perhaps your 'glowing wire' palletiser for example.

It would explain large stationary magnetic fields in your premises which have been wiping data on hard drives. It would also explain large discarges through your earthing.

It would also explain why your phones don't work, and why sometimes the current being discharged is huge like in the 'glowing wire' palletiser example.

Might even explain why your breakers are tripping with no load. Depends how big the static field is.

I'd get your voltmeter out and test your building's metal structure's voltage relative to ground. In fact try and find a piece that is isolated from ground, then have it's voltage with respect to ground montiored constantly for a few weeks and see how it changes when 'events' occur.

Have a look for walls or roof panels which are large and are situated opposite each other. It's a suggestion which comes mighty close to an explanation of everything that's been going on. Also explains why they don't happen all the time and why some are worse than others, it all depending upon how long they are being charged up by the power lines before something links them together and they discharge.
 
  • #113
business man said:
With regard to proximity of issues, There are 2 single story concrete shear walls embeded within the office. BTW shear walls should be footings to truss roof to be effective.
We seem to have the highest field readings above those walls at the second story level..

Wouldn't by any chance change from a concrete to a metallic wall there would it?
 
  • #114
Adder_Noir said:
Wouldn't by any chance change from a concrete to a metallic wall there would it?

They have rebar in them.
 
  • #115
Adder_Noir said:
Just curious but when you say no load does that mean no assumed load i.e. with all appliances turned off or are they actually tripping when no current is measured flowing through them?

I hope it's not the first signs of the Earth's magnetic field reversing :-p Apparently it happens every x no. of thousand years and we'll be utterly screwed when it does it again! :smile:

Hmm... another thought enters the mind. It appears it's a quite a good one too. It's almost as good as Danger's suggestion about being between two magnetic fields (which I'd suggest to the power company), so here goes:

I wonder if it might be possible that part of your building is not connected to earth. This is entirely possible if the installation electrician was not too clued up and what should go where to put it as politely as possible, especially given that you've had to fix several ground faults of his.

So is it possible that two large parts of your building which are made of metal and say running parallel to each other are being charged up by the nearby power lines. Over time they will act like a large capacitor if they are both isolated from each other and ground.

Perhaps your events are being caused by things occasionally making contact with them and causing them to discharge like perhaps your 'glowing wire' palletiser for example.

It would explain large stationary magnetic fields in your premises which have been wiping data on hard drives. It would also explain large discarges through your earthing.

It would also explain why your phones don't work, and why sometimes the current being discharged is huge like in the 'glowing wire' palletiser example.

Might even explain why your breakers are tripping with no load. Depends how big the static field is.

I'd get your voltmeter out and test your building's metal structure's voltage relative to ground. In fact try and find a piece that is isolated from ground, then have it's voltage with respect to ground montiored constantly for a few weeks and see how it changes when 'events' occur.

Have a look for walls or roof panels which are large and are situated opposite each other. It's a suggestion which comes mighty close to an explanation of everything that's been going on. Also explains why they don't happen all the time and why some are worse than others, it all depending upon how long they are being charged up by the power lines before something links them together and they discharge.

We have so many meters in the building that it's probably been done, going to be done , or not enough meters to do everything, but i will try to push this one too.
 
  • #116
It's a perceived little or no load. what I mean is that there were normal or no loads perceived but there could have been some unkown mysterious load or spike that has yet to be measured during an event.
 
  • #117
business man said:
We have so many meters in the building that it's probably been done, going to be done , or not enough meters to do everything, but i will try to push this one too.

It'll be dead easy to do, you just need a beep test to check for continuity of your metal structures to ground and to each other. Your looking for an isolated one.

Hmm..perceived load, so the actual trip current hasn't been measured yet. Not sure if you're aware mate but to trip even a 6A breaker instantly you need a fault current of 1000's of amps which is basically a dead short. If you've had all these guys in testing then I doubt the breakers are being steadily overloaded or they'd have picked that up. I also suspect you're not getting fault current through them as they'd be showing a lot of high current wear by now such as having black scorch marks on their terminals. I suspect something is activating them directly through their mechanism rather than through the circuit they're protecting, which again brings us back to the probability that it's a standing or fluctuating magnetic field causing all your grief.

I have to say though mate I really don't think a stationary magnetic field would be enough on its own to make your palletiser wire glow or your lights dim. That suggests to me the energy from the magnetic field is being stored up by something and discharging occasionally which is what led me to the capacitor idea.

Out of curiosity what was the last occupier of the premises nature of business? Did he have phones and sensitive equipment in there?

Forgive me for asking something you might already have answered, but are your breakers and distribution board in a panel?
 
  • #118
Yes, enclosed and locked in steel panels over night but doors usually open during the day. this doesn't make any difference. As i said before the breaker panels should act as pretty good faraday cages.

The comments seem logical re breakers. So far no signs of wearing out.

The last guy in there had similar phones and computers and said he had no problems.
 
  • #119
The lights never dim, they go off and on rather quickly cycling maybe every second or two, and sometimes does not result in a tripped breaker.

I would not put too much emphasis on the glowing wires, since this might be an exageration. The wires do make some pretty loud crackling noises occasionally but usually a soft crackling.
 
  • #120
Nothing more from me personally here, but I ran into a buddy, who is an excellent electrician, at my pool match tonight. Luckily, I wasn't playing against him, because he's one of the best shooters in the province. Anyhow, I mentioned that there was a mystery afoot, and gave him directions to this thread. He will be looking into it. If he registers in order to post, I have no idea what his username will be.
 

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