Induction: The Other
Invisible Killer
Those of us who work with electricity know the dangers
of this unseen, invisible force. Some of us have seen
electricity when something goes wrong, such as
uncontrolled voltages due to phase-to-phase and
phase-to-ground faults. We have been trained to “treat
it hot until it’s grounded.”
Another invisible killer, a partner to high voltages, is
induction. Induction is when you have ungrounded,
de-energized lines in close proximity to energized
hi-voltage lines. The energized lines create a magnetic
field which, if it is of a high enough magnitude, will
energize the dead lines with a static charge. The
de-energized lines will retain this static charge until
it is discharged, hopefully with a set of grounds
instead of a human conductor.
If
the static charge is large enough it will cause serious
injury and or death. We’ve all walked across a carpet
then touched something metallic and we get a tingle.
When we are talking transmission voltages, that tingle
can send you to the promised land.
Let’s not take short cuts. “Treat it hot until it’s
grounded,” and don’t forget about the other invisible
killer—induction.
Art Torres
July 24, 2006