I unfortunately got involved with a restaurant remodel (yes a group is reopening an old closed for while restaurant during panic pandemic where indoor dining was just allowed at reduced occupancy) and one of the two overhead services is interesting. There's a single phase service too.
I looked at the service at 3:30 pm on a Friday so...
The service is an overhead 3 phase service with 3 wires. No neutral just a ground wire wrapped around a screw in the meter enclosure and going to a ground rod. The meter only interrupts 2 legs so I measured 120v to ground on load side of the center terminal of the meter. All line legs measure 120v to ground and 208v between them.
What I don't understand, and I might try this, is if there is a fault to ground where does the fault current go? Usually it's carried back on the neutral which is bonded to ground but this only has a ground rod. The service is only 50' away. Maybe it's an ungrounded service?
I looked at the service at 3:30 pm on a Friday so...
The service is an overhead 3 phase service with 3 wires. No neutral just a ground wire wrapped around a screw in the meter enclosure and going to a ground rod. The meter only interrupts 2 legs so I measured 120v to ground on load side of the center terminal of the meter. All line legs measure 120v to ground and 208v between them.
What I don't understand, and I might try this, is if there is a fault to ground where does the fault current go? Usually it's carried back on the neutral which is bonded to ground but this only has a ground rod. The service is only 50' away. Maybe it's an ungrounded service?