Check the electrical load and ensure that the sensors do not exceed the 10 Amp maximum. If your supply is outside this range, appliances can be damaged, motors overheat, and lighting flickers. As current increases, voltage drop increases. Although most power flowing on the transmission and distribution grid originates at large power generators, power is sometimes also supplied back to the grid by end users via Distributed Energy Resources (DER)— small, modular, energy generation and storage technologies that provide electric. If voltage is too high, protective breakers will open to prevent damage to equipment, causing portions of the grid to lose power. If voltage is too low, distribution utilities may be unable to maintain voltage to their customers, and customer equipment will not operate properly and/or lines will. Under normal circumstances, the output voltage of the transformer should be maintained within a certain range, and a low or high voltage may be an electrical fault. Find this kind of fault, from the following aspects. Power supply voltage The power supply voltage is low or high, so the output.
[PDF Version]