When Should The Neutral Be Switched - ATS
When Should The Neutral Be Switched - ATS
This information sheet examines the issue and offers some recommendations.
2.0 - The Difference Between Non Switched and Switched Neutral Transfer Switches
When the neutral of a system is grounded, a 2-pole (single phase) and 3-pole (three phase) transfer switch is selected, and the neutral is a solid link
with only the phase contacts carrying the load being switched. If it is determined, mainly for personnel and equipment safety, the neutral has to be
switched, then the transfer switch selected would be 3-pole (single phase) and 4-pole (three phase), with the additional pole switching the neutral.
GFP
B
A
A B C
Three-Pole
Summary: The general rule is when you have
Utility Input
Transfer
CKT Switch a grounded neutral at both the generator and
BKT.
the utility, you must use a transfer switch with
N
Bond to housing
G N C B A
GFP
B
A
A B C
Four-Pole
Utility Input
Transfer
Switch
N
GND
Generator Set
Bond to housing
G N C B A
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The installation information provided in this information sheet is informational in nature only, and should not be considered the advice of a properly licensed and qualified electrician or used in place of a detailed review of the applicable National
Electric Codes and local codes. Specific questions about how this information may affect any particular situation should be addressed to a licensed and qualified electrician.
2.0 - Regulations that have to be considered:
Before considering the reasons for switching the neutral, we have to consider regulations of NEC 230-95 and NFPA 70-1996
that lay out procedures for Ground Fault Protection (GFP). Entities such as NEC and NFPA that specify safety standards are
concerned that grounding the neutral alone does not provide full protection from stray electrical currents and other faults
occurring in current carrying conductors. NEC makes the following distinctions between system and equipment grounding:
• System Ground: A system ground is a connection to ground from the current carrying conductors of a circuit or
interior wiring system.
• Equipment Ground: Where the equipment body not carrying current has metal parts, such as the generator or
metal conduit is grounded.
• System Neutral Ground: This is when the neutral point of a transformer, electric motor, or system is grounded.
The neutral point is where the same potential is found, if any of the free ends of the system are connected to the
appropriate main terminal or system line.
NEC recognizes that while the utility supply grounds the neutral of the power transformer supplying the user, personnel
and equipment safety can be at risk from transient voltages from line to ground during switching and ungrounded neutral
faults on connected equipment. Therefore, the NEC requires that GFP devices must be used for all solidly-grounded wye
services. GFP devices are designed to detect phase to ground faults. To avoid unintended paths that can go around the
GFP device, it is important to avoid several neutral grounding points and have the service neutral grounded at the main
distribution board.
2. When to Switch the Neutral: When the generator system is required to be separately grounded at site, a
transfer switch with a switchable neutral should be selected. With a switched neutral, the generator set can be
wired as a separately derived system to the load and normal power supply. In this configuration, the neutral is
not solidly connected through the transfer switch, but switched. Also, the neutral is designed to be switched
simultaneously with the switching of the load carrying phases. By utilizing this system, the designer/user will
ensure GFP operation as intended by NEC codes.
In the switched neutral mode, the generator is a separately derived system to the rest of the electrical system
with its neutral grounded at the housing. The neutral return path is left open for ground return currents by the
transfer switch contacts. In addition, nuisance tripping caused by unbalanced loads is avoided. The generator set
is totally separate to the utility supply and a safe alternative to a solid neutral connection.
Another example where a switched neutral connection is preferable is when there is more than one separately
derived electrical system being backed up by a common power source. An example of this would be a building
being fed by two different utility sources. For this type of installation, each utility service would have its own
separately derived neutral ground. To properly back-up portions of each utility service, the installation would
require two transfer switches. If the transfer switches had solid neutrals, each system would have two grounding
paths. To avoid this scenario, the designer would select a transfer switch with a switchable neutral pole to
maintain the single path to ground system.
(Graphic Two shows a diagram of a system with a switched neutral)
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Info Sheet #56 © PLC Enterprises, LLC 2018