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Channel: Acceptable ground to neutral voltage? - Home Improvement Stack Exchange
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Answer by AMIT for Acceptable ground to neutral voltage?

It depend on load to load senstivity. It depent on voltage difference between Vnw.r.tg and Vlw.r.tg at any perticular time t. If this difference exceed the load sensitivity of load, then it will get...

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Answer by Tester101 for Acceptable ground to neutral voltage?

The best I could do was to dig up a fine print note (FPN) in the National Electrical Code (NEC). In theory, there is no limit (as stated in other answers). In practice, the limit is when things stop...

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Answer by Eric Gunnerson for Acceptable ground to neutral voltage?

NEC recommends (but does not require) that there is no more than 3% drop on a branch circuit. On a 120V circuit, that would be 3.6V, which would be split across the hot and the neutral, so you wouldn't...

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Answer by mburuga for Acceptable ground to neutral voltage?

Normally , it is zero.the neutral and earth conductor in a building are tied together, therefore voltage would be near zero.

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Answer by Tester101 for Acceptable ground to neutral voltage?

VOLTAGE BETWEEN NEUTRAL AND GROUNDProper Installation.In a proper neutral-to-ground installation, the voltage between the neutral conductor and any metal part of the electrical system will be equal to...

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Acceptable ground to neutral voltage?

First of all I'm pretty sure I know the theory behind the effect. I know about the inductive and capacitive coupling, about 3-phase balance problems and about ground bounce, so this question isn't...

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