I'm only posing this for consideration by others. Suppose you have a 3-phase tap that is protected by fuses and you lose a phase due to a line-to-ground fault. A 3-phase XFMR is down line from the blown fuse, but is still energized on the other two phases. On this tap, the blown-fused phase feeds a small residential development. What would you anticipate to happen (neglecting single phasing and ground imbalance conditions that could take this line out entirely either at the fuse bank or further upline at an electronic control or relay)?
Note: I'm using a distribution grid as the example system and the winding configuration of the XFMR is not necessarily an overbearing factor
@rg1 @cos90 and others prepping for the exam, this is for y'all. I am merely using this example for understanding backfeed conditions, or if even back feeding would be incurred on the "blown phase." Feel free to respond and I'll chime in as needed.
Note: I'm using a distribution grid as the example system and the winding configuration of the XFMR is not necessarily an overbearing factor
@rg1 @cos90 and others prepping for the exam, this is for y'all. I am merely using this example for understanding backfeed conditions, or if even back feeding would be incurred on the "blown phase." Feel free to respond and I'll chime in as needed.