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Wire one PE terminal to the ground bar in the control panel. The
other PE terminal shall be wired directly to the motor - ungrounded
except right at the motor.
Grounding the Discrete Control and Signal Wiring
To
ground the control and signal wiring, you need to:
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Ground the 0V or ground terminal at the equipment (source) end, not the
drive end. You must ground all control and signal wiring at a single
point in the system, remote from the drive.
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Ground the shield if you are using shielded control and signal wires.
Connecting the TE Terminal Block
(found on larger frame sizes only)
The TE
terminal block is used for all control signal shields within the drive.
Refer to the frame specific chapters for the TE terminal block location.
The TE
terminal block accepts wire with the following specifications:
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Wire Information |
Description |
|
Minimum wire size |
0.30 mm2 (22 AWG) |
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Maximum wire size |
2.1 mm2 (14 AWG) |
|
Maximum torque |
1.36 N-m (12 lb-in) |
|
Wire type |
Use only copper wire |
Grounding the Safety Ground (PE)
Most
codes require a safety ground. You can connect the ground bus to
adjacent building steel (such as a girder or joist) or a floor ground
loop, provided that the grounding points comply with your national (such
as NEC), regional, or local regulations.
Connecting the Drive to the System Ground
Connect
the drive to the system ground at the power ground (PE) terminal
provided on the power terminal block (TB1). Ground impedance must
conform to the requirements of national and local industrial safety
regulations (such as NEC, VDE 0160, and BSI). You should inspect and
test the ground impedance at appropriate and regular intervals.
Even
if you have a floating secondary, the building must have a safety
(earth) ground.
In any
cabinet, you should use a single, low-impedance ground point or ground
bus bar. You should:
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Ground all circuits independently and directly to this ground point or
bus bar.
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Directly connect the AC supply ground conductor to this ground point or
bus bar.
Defining the High Frequency Ground Current Paths
You
need to define the paths through which the high frequency ground
currents flow. Defining these paths helps to assure that noise-sensitive
circuits do not share a path with high-frequency ground currents and to
minimize the area enclosed by these paths. You must separate current
carrying ground conductors. Control and signal ground conductors should
not run near or parallel to a power ground conductor.
Connecting the Ground Conductor of the Motor Cable
Connect
the ground conductor of the motor cable (drive end) directly to the
drive ground terminal, not to the enclosure bus bar. Grounding directly
to the drive (and filter, if installed) provides a direct route for
high-frequency current returning from the motor frame and ground
conductor. At the motor end, you should also connect the ground
conductor to the motor case ground.
If you
use shielded or armored cables, connect the shield to the drive chassis
and the motor frame.
Posted 4 December 2000
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